Posts by jessica

Captive Genders editors at Bluestockings Books

Captive Genders: Trans Embodiment and the Prison Industrial Complex

Book reading and panel discussion

Wed October 26th 7-9pm

Bluestockings bookstore 172 Allen St.New York, NY 10002

Pathologized, terrorized, and confined, trans/gender non-conforming and queer folks have always struggled against the enormity of the prison industrial complex. The first collection of its kind, Eric A. Stanley and Nat Smith bring together current and former prisoners, activists, and academics to offer new ways for understanding how race, gender, ability, and sexuality are lived under the crushing weight of captivity. Through a politic of gender self-determination, this collection argues that trans/queer liberation and prison abolition must be grown together. From rioting against police violence and critiquing hate crimes legislation to prisoners demanding access to HIV medications, and far beyond, Captive Genders is a challenge for us all to join the struggle.

with:

Eric A. Stanley works at the intersections of radical trans/queer politics, theories of state violence, and visual culture. Eric edited Captive Genders: Trans Embodiment and the Prison Industrial Complex (AK Press, 2011) and along with Chris Vargas, directed the films Homotopia (2006) and Criminal Queers (2011).

Ralowe T. Ampu is the seductive fragrance wafting through milieus of unbridled danger and intrigue. Yes, whether it be outing gay Castro realtors as AIDS profiteers with ACT UP and GAY SHAME or trying to free the New Jersey 4, or prevent the non-profit management company in her SRO from killing her neighbors, Ralowe is there.

Reina Gossett lives in Brooklyn & works at the Sylvia Rivera Law Project supporting SRLP’s membership and community organizing work.  She believes creativity & imagination are crucial for growing strong communities and practicing self-determination.

Toshio Meronek is on the editorial collective for The Abolitionist, Critical Resistance’s newspaper and runs whereslulu.com, a website on disability and popular culture.

Kimma Walker lives in East Orange, NJ and is the PROUD MOTHER of Terrain Dandridge who is one of the New Jersey 4. http://freenj4.wordpress.com/

Event cosponsored by Counterpublic NYC and the Sylvia Rivera Law Project

captivegenders.net

David Price on Weaponizing Anthropology at Orca Books in Olympia

David Price presents Weaponizing Anthropology: Social Science in Service of the Militarized State

Saturday, Oct 22 7:00p
at Orca Books, Olympia, WA

David Price, Professor of Anthropology at St. Martin’s University, will discuss his new book, which shows how anthropological knowledge is being harnessed by military and intelligence agencies to placate hostile foreign populations, particularly in the military operations of Iraq and Afghanistan. Price’s inquiry into past relationships between anthropologists and the CIA and Pentagon provides the historical base for this exposé of the current abuses of anthropology by these agencies.

Read more: http://calendar.theolympian.com/olympia-wa/events/show/216947344-david-price-presents-weaponizing-anthropology-social-science-in-service-of-the-militarized-state#ixzz1aTuxzIO2
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Occupy Baltimore: We are the 99%!

Last night, October 2nd, 2011, Baltimore joined a slew of other US cities in gathering together to begin organization for a local Occupy Baltimore action. Somewhere between 150-200 familiar faces and new allies packed the 2640 space in Charles Village for the first discussions on what a Baltimore-specific solidarity occupation would look like. I could say more, but Umar Farooq of the Baltimore Indypendent Reader says it all so much better in this fantastic piece.

Check out Indyreader.org for the original posting, and to keep up with all of their amazing coverage of local and national issues that the big media miss because they’re too busy being shmucks.

Activists gather to plan Occupy Baltimore movement

Monday October 3rd, 2011

Umar Farooq

“Banks Got Bailed Out, We Got Sold Out!” chanted the crowd.

The growing nationwide “Occupy” movement may be coming to Baltimore.  More than two hundred activists gathered at St. Johns Church in Charles Village Sunday night for more than three hours, planning a response to calls for public action by their counterparts in New York.
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The Occupy Wall Street actions have attracted international attention, drawing an array of mostly young participants, and sparking hundreds of arrests.  Dozens of other cities have taken the same approach in the last few weeks, with hundreds of activists taking to public spaces to express their outrage at the disenfranchisement of “99%” of Americans in favor of the wealthy.

The Occupy Baltimore movement began as a Facebook page and Google group, both with hundreds of members.  Sunday’s meeting was meant to decide on a number of issues, including what the movement’s goals should be, and how it should go about achieving them.  But one of the distinguishing themes of the Occupy movement has been the intentional lack of specific demands, as participants have opted instead to use the opportunity for shared education and discussion.  The Occupy Baltimore movement chose the same route Sunday, with a number of participants expressing dismay not only at the system of government they deal with, but also with the lack of mechanisms available for changing it.  One participant said they would like to educate themselves and “offer something instead of demand something.”  There were however, a minority that felt the goals of the movement should have been discussed in more detail, and that Baltimore’s largest demographic, poor African Americans, were not adequately represented at the meeting.

The Occupy Baltimore movement is aiming to follow consensus-based decision making, and for the most part seemed to adhere to the system.  On occasion, a few participants “blocked” decisions, signalling that they felt if the group disregarded their position, they would leave it, but it did not appear anyone felt sidelined enough to actually bring their participation to an end.  A mainstream reporter who asked for permission from the group to report on the decision making process was asked to leave, due to the strong objections of a small minority, highlighting the degree of adherence to the consensus process.

Baltimore activists are particularly weary of law enforcement, having been the target of extensive illegal surveillance by undercover state and local agents, leading to a congressional investigation and a number of lawsuits.

The discussion on where any action or occupation would occur touched on the kind of message the movement hopes to send to the public.  A number of locations were discussed, but in the end a presence around the financial district and the Inner Harbor was settled upon, as a number of participants pointed out the nature of the area: a publicly funded development that provides little benefit for working class locals.  The Inner Harbor has been in the spotlight recently, drawing criticism for the lack of public space there, and the labor practices of some of the businesses there, many of them national franchises.

The list of grievances included the epidemic of foreclosures in Baltimore, the incentives given to developers, the lack of jobs paying a living wage, the lack of funding for schools, the lack of health care, and the continuing wars overseas.

The group plans on meeting again Monday, and will begin public actions Tuesday at noon at the McKeldin Fountains at Pratt and Light streets, a public park.  Almost all of the participants also pledged to march in support of a previously planned action being organized Tuesday evening by more than 30 community groups to denounce a planned $100 million juvenile detention facility downtown.


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Mattilda Bernstein Sycamore reading at ABQ Zine Fest!

ABQ ZINE FEST PRESENTS READING BY ACCLAIMED WRITER, ACTIVIST, FILMMAKER, (((((MATTILDA BERNSTEIN SYCAMORE)))))
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 2nd @ 5pm CELLAR DOOR GIFTS & GALLERY 147 Harvard SE Suggested donation for this event is $5-$10. No one will be turned away for lack of funds. Space is limited. This event is sponsored by the generous support of Self-Serve Sexuality Resource Center!

Check out Mattilda’s new edited collection, Why Are Faggots So Afraid of Faggots: Flaming Challenges to Masculinity, Objectification, and the Desire to Conform

For more information about ABQ Zine Fest please visit abqzinefest.com or abqzinefest@gmail.com

“It’s not about convincing anyone, it’s about opening our eyes.” A new review of Revolt and Crisis in Greece

A while back we put out a call for reviews from you, good people. We love to hear what you think about the titles that we love to labor over, and find out how they impact you. In turn, your reviews help spread the word about the things we publish because well, we think they’re great.

Here’s a thoughtful review of Revolt and Crisis in Greece: Between a Present Yet to Pass and a Future Still to Come, courtesy of AK ally Luigi Celentano.

As always, check out the Occupied London blog for some of the most up-to-date analysis on the situation in Greece.

Revolt and Crisis in Greece: Between a Present Yet to Pass and a Future Still to Come (AK Press / Occupied London)

If there is something I can say about this book is that it is a MUST read for anyone willing to comprehend the situation in Greece, be them anarchist or not.

The variey of viewpoints, the deep analyses of its authors is remarkable. It’s an invaluable insight into a revolt that dares not die.

Having been in Athens just lately, and experiencing the protests first-hand and participating in them, the same feeling of hope and resistance that swells the streets is conveyed by this book. You can feel it in the air, as in every page turn.

It also draws an important conclusion —despite the inconclusivess of the current state of affairs—: mainly, that we need and must remain united, that no creed, ideology or stance can save us if we are not in solidarity with each other. After all, aren’t we all affected by this capitalist crisis?

For me, the anarchist principle of solidarity must govern these days as never before. Let’s every action we undertake, be it out there in the streets or deep inside our hearts, be a glimpse into the future. Let us not look into the past with worshipping glory, but with a learning eye, in order to build this present, and its subsequent future, out of the ruins of capitalist empire.

It’s not about convincing anyone, it’s about opening our eyes. This book is essential to learning and understanding both the Greek crisis and the capitalist merciless regime we are living under, and offers hope to anyone willing to move forward —albeit not without a fight.

Despite capitalism’s endless wars and crackdowns, it is right there on the brink of falling into the abyss of History. “After all, the wounded animal will sometimes grind its teeth; a show of force can be sign of desperation.” Let’s give it the final push, shall we?

“Just as the metaphysics of Western civilisation was born in Athens, so it must die there. May something more beautiful emerge in its wake.”

No better words than that.

Luigi, from Buenos Aires.-

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Fourth hiker, Shon Meckfessel, on the release of Shane Bauer and Josh Fattal

In 2009 Shane Bauer, Sarah Shourd, and Josh Fattal were detained while hiking near the Iran-Iraq border. Accused of spying and trespassing, they were arrested and held by the Iranian government. Sarah was released last year, but Shane and Josh had been held for two years, only being released on bail yesterday. On this morning’s Democracy Now! Shon Meckfessel, author of Suffled How it Gush: A North American in the Balkans, and the fourth hiker with them in Iraq, comments on their release and on Shane Bauer’s statement.

Read the full story on Democracy Now! or watch the video below:

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Two new reviews of In the Crossfire: Adventures of a Vietnamese Revolutionary

Ngo Van’s In the Crossfire: Adventures of a Vietnamese Revolutionary (edited by Ken Knabb) is a vital history of the decades of struggle in Vietnam leading up to the Vietnam War, shedding light on the movements caught at the intersection of opposition to the French colonial rule, and the Stalinist opposition that silenced almost all [...]

Continue reading at Revolution by the Book …

I Mix What I Like! A Mixtape Manifesto reviewed in HipHop DX

“In 14 short, impressively precise chapters, Ball elegantly analyzes the present status of African America, contextualized not only by the aged historical narratives of political economies but also by the vibrant, living fabric of 21st century Washington, D.C.”—Brian Sims for HipHop DX.

See the original posting of the review on the HipHop DX website, and more reviews of I Mix what I Like! at IMixWhatILike.com.

Book Review: I Mix What I Like: A Mixtape Manifesto by Jared Ball

Book Review: I Mix What I Like: A Mixtape Manifesto by Jared Ball

Taken together, “I Mix What I Like’s” jewels represent a compelling assessment of the status not only of African America, but also of its colonial master.

Expecting there to be a sanctioned press from among the colonized that poses journalistic challenges to established power is simply irrational.” – Jared Ball

Perhaps the most consistent and conspicuous omission by those who claim expertise or authority on Hip Hop is that of the colonial status of African America. What every single one of the degenerate, traitorous, disingenuous Hip Hop talking heads you’ve ever seen on television, learned from in the classroom or heard on the radio has in common is that they conveniently never mention the fact that Hip Hop has served as a primary means by which Black folks in America are colonized- mind, body and spirit.

Dr. Jared Ball’s new book I Mix What I Like: A Mixtape Manifesto broadcasts this colonization in 1080p. Further, it offers a compelling argument for the potential of what he refers to as “Mixtape Radio” to function as Emancipatory Journalism (EJ), media work that “challenges conventional notions of journalistic practice” (p.121) and exposes the relationship of the press to society.

In 14 short, impressively precise chapters, Ball elegantly analyzes the present status of African America, contextualized not only by the aged historical narratives of political economies but also by the vibrant, living fabric of 21st century Washington, D.C. A prefatory note to the reader and introduction situate the ensuing information and perspectives in a Pan-African paradigm which weaves African metaphysical astrology, European linguistic assaults, corporate dominance, digital technology, academic scholarship and Arnold Schwarzenegger into an Internal Colonialism Theory (ICT) framework.

Yeah.

Chapter one opens with a brutally honest discussion titled “The Colonized Rhythm Nation,” which defines and clarifies the role of the United States of America as an empire, or a “…state (which) controls the effective political sovereignty of another political society” (p. 19). That other political society, of course, is the “Hip Hop Nation.” Here, Ball diverges from the time-honored talking-head playbook routinely used by (insert your favorite Hip Hop media outlet here) by arguing that whichever version of Hip Hop-as-Black-cultural-movement you subscribe to ultimately misses the point of Hip Hop’s existence as a “colonized extension of a predating and continuing colonialism” (p.20) that steals and victimizes; maims and distorts, domestically and internationally. According to Ball, the racially vague term “Hip Hop Nation” itself simultaneously conjures notions of social classification and contributes to a sort of “Hip Hop Nationalism” in which hip hoppers fight for its survival and perpetuation. This would be all good, except for the fact that during the mid-1990s “the corporate elite subsume[d] this nationalistic tendency within its own imperial designs.” (p.23).

This explains a lot. It explains Russell Simmons. It explains The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air. It damn sure explains MC Hammer, Diddy, and Rick Ross. It explains why “Hip Hop culture” is euphemism for self-inflicted wound; and why drugs, sexual pathology, and conspicuous material consumption are unchallenged hallmarks of “keeping it real.” It explains why every single piece of mass-produced Hip Hop media in the history of the world has served to substantiate and reinforce the existing power relations between the oppressed and the oppressor. Ball quotes Frantz Fanon, who put it this way: “The very purpose of popular culture and media within a colony is that it “reminds the settler of the reality of colonial power and, by its very existence, dispenses safety, serenity.” In other words, Hip Hop is medicine for the beneficiaries of White Patriarchal Supremacy (WPS); and poison for its victims.

Finally, it explains why Hip Hop, despite having the industrial power to generate tens of billions of dollars per year in revenue, has resulted in more Black and Brown “plantation-like”(p.26) labor and living conditions than ever before in history. Race, then, is identified as the primary determinant of wealth, health care, standard of living, and education throughout the world. Perhaps the boldest statement in I Mix What I Like is Ball’s proclamation that:

“No amount of popular, sanctioned media is anti-colonial. They are all consciously racist products that operate as systemic defense mechanisms.  Decolonization can only come with unsanctioned media.”(p.38).

The implications of this Ballsian proclamation are profound, for if true, it indicts every single corporate sponsored website, television show, radio program, ringtone, magazine, album, newspaper, and book you’ve ever seen as racist. (Yes, that includes Facebook.) It also negates any libratory value ascribed to “progressive” “acceptable” forms of resistance (e.g. the Internet, NPR (the focus of chapter 10), Democracy Now). Most important for our purposes here, the proclamation serves as the fundamental assumption on which the argument for engaging in mixtape radio as EJ is based.

Chapter 2 engages media as ideological, and spells out the necessity of ideological control of culture in the colonial enterprise.  Ball literally equates media with popularly disseminated ideology. Also referred to en sum as “pop culture,” this ideology basically involves depicting African people as inferior and deserving of their subjugation.

Ball’s description of this in an earlier article titled “Hip-Hop As Mass Media: Cultural Imperialism, Commodity and the Politics of Economy and Image” warrants quoting in its entirety here:

Rulers of the world have long since learned that the best method for a few to control many is not by means of whips, chains or guns but by manipulating the culture of the group to be ruled. That is, have the cultural expression of the conquered be adjusted to create an appearance of inclusion and shared interests with the rulers while assuring that this remains just that, an impression, mirage, myth or lie. This is why the end results in popularized hip-hop music and imagery are focused on conspicuous consumption, misogyny, violence and these become the standard for “the Black American experience.”  This results in the perception that what is an intended, systemic occurrence – Black poverty, crime, violence, etc. – is actually the fault of flawed Black people, communities or cultures.”  (p.5).

Of course, different versions of this message are literally preached to African America on a continual basis, resulting in what is oft referred to as a destruction of African consciousness. The virtual obliteration of African America’s African consciousness is being witnessed on virtually every level, perhaps no more clearly than in America’s collective inability to identify its ideology as European. It is precisely because America’s mode of operation is not identified as European in nature and origin that Black folks are able to perpetuate its (clear) daily assaults on Black life.

Almost as a case-in-point, Chapter 2 defecates on Marxist analyses of class-rule, which are (unfortunately) often regarded as revolutionary and counter to the aims and operation of capitalist exploitation.  Ball notes that such analyses, according to Ayi Kwei Armah are limited by Marx’s “binding Eurocentricity and lack of praxis” (p.44), and highlights Fanon’s assertion that  “[t]he cause is the consequence; you are rich because you are white, you are white because you are rich.” (p.44).

In order to version what was African as “Black” it is necessary to make what is European “White”, or by proxy, “American.”   “In other words, people are defined by both who they are (or made to seem to be) and equally by who they are not” (p.50). Both Blackness and Whiteness have been constructed and revised over the years… “the colonizer [thus] being created though the creation of the colonized.” (p.50).  Returning to Fanon, Ball stresses the nature of the colonial dynamic as torturous, but not deadly.  “the aim sought is rather a continued agony than a total disappearance of the pre-existing culture.” (p.53).  For Ball “[t]he culture of the colonized must survive in some form or fashion so as to create an appearance of validity or authenticity.” (p.53).

In reading this discussion I was reminded of Nas’ classic bar from “If I Ruled The World”:

“It’s elementary / They want us all gone…eventually.” …The most important part of which is the “eventually.” It’s not that the system wants to get rid of Black and Brown folks ASAPishly. They simply can’t manage without us. Ball also refers to the re-imaging of Indigenous people into mascots like “Redskins,” “Chiefs,” “Braves,” “Fighting Illini,” and “Seminoles” has long been connected  to the genocidal atrocities committed against them. Similarly, the cultural fare of African America is systematically hijacked; African plane, African airport, European pilot.

Chapters 3-8 offer lesson after lesson in the reorganization of perception; away from perspectives which posture society’s institutions as anything other than oppressive. Succinct analysis of the educational-, journalistic-, corporate-, and media-industrial complexes orient the reader toward the largely invisible problem of hegemonic control and suffocation of creativity, autonomy, and dignity of African America on an immense scale. Ball’s ability to focus a rigorous, scientific approach to data and information synthesis through an unapologetically subjective lens is evidence not only of his scholarly talents and unquestionable intellect, but also of his years of dedicated service and sacrifice to African America.

His remarkable handle on the complex issues, needs, and obstacles facing African America is evidenced most clearly by chapter 9, which offers a case study of the nation’s (mostly Black) capital. More specifically, Ball recounts the specific ways in which Washington D.C. is and has been developed into the premiere colony for Black and Brown folks on the North American landscape largely thorough the astonishingly effective use of radio mind control. Ball exposes Clear Channel (the world’s largest radio station owner which owns WASH 97.1 FM, WBIG 100.3 FM, and WWDC 101.1, among others in D.C.); Radio One (African America’s largest radio provider, which owns WKYS 93.9 FM, WMMJ 102.3 FM, WOL 1450 AM, and WYCB 1340 AM); and Infinity Broadcasting (which owns WPGC 95.5 FM, WPGC 1580 AM, WARW 94.7 FM, WHFS 99.1 FM, and WJFK 16.7 FM) as largely responsible for the District’s lack of internal control of its economy, its schools, and its law enforcement structure; high rates of gentrification; and militaristic and segregationist policing techniques. Also un-spared is the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), a governmental entity “whose nominal role is regulation of the public’s airwaves, has, since its inception in 1934, never been able to ensure that Black image was ever anything other than an endless string of “Uncle Toms, Mammies and Aunt Jemimas.” (p.103). Ball also critiques the Internet’s role as a colonizing force, and along the way dismisses the idea that grassroots artists are somehow more popular today than before due to newer technology. Both The Washington Post and The Washington Times get what they had coming to them, as do Disney, Viacom, General Electric and News Corp. And lest you worry, no decent analysis of media as it relates to Black folks would be complete without ripping Oprah a new one. Ball essentially clowns Winfrey for her characteristically simple-minded 2007 remarks about how (unlike inner-city kids in America who ask for iPods and sneakers) kids in South Africa “…don’t ask for money or toys. They ask for uniforms so they can go to school.” (p. 109). Ball points out that “The desire for material goods that Winfrey laments is a likely result of the formulaic, massively repetitive and news-less radio imposed upon that community- an imposition that, as previously noted, occurs regardless of a particular community’s desire to hear it.” (p.109) and then points to a 2005 marketing research study indicating that the product brand names most often mentioned in Hip Hop lyrics  that year were Mercedes Benz (#1), Nike (#2), and, you guessed it: AK-47 assault rifles, which made the list at #10.

Chapters 10 and 11 argue that the narrowing of public opinion and restricted ranges of thought effected by NPR and state mechanisms like the FBI’s Counter Intelligence Program (COINTELPRO) both serve the interests of the elite few. In the former, “the image of the colonized, in this case, becomes the product of the colonizer, and is authentic to that relationship.” (p.114). In the latter, COINTELPRO is described as a “…natural offshoot of the process of “predation” whereby the conquered must be monitored and managed.”(p.117).

These chapters set up the culminating chapters of I Mix What I Like wherein Ball lays-out the specific need for and potential of the mixtape as EJ (chapter 12); a viable solution: FreeMix Radio: The Original Mixtape Radio Show (chapter 13); and the pitfalls of cooptation threatened by White liberalism and so-called progressive journalism (chapter 14). According to Ball, “Mixtape radio is conceptually grounded in the need for the colonized to assume leadership within a broader social movement that uses media effectively, as opposed to being marginalized within a media reform movement that assumes incorrectly (and if at all) that the conditions of the most oppressed will improve with a moderately reshaped media policy.” (p. 148).

Taken together, I Mix What I Like’s jewels represent a compelling assessment of the status not only of African America, but also of its colonial master. Its singular shortcoming is not in the text itself but rather in its potential to ultimately buttress the very colonial paradigm that the mixtape is argued to confront. By publishing such a cogent, compelling framework for reinterpreting the psycho, socio and economical realities of Hip Hop for African America, Ball may have unwittingly provided the enemy with intelligence needed to further crush and dismantle the unaccounted-for liberation potential that is hidden by the oppressed’s lack of access to mainstream distribution channels. Through AK Press, Ball has ensured that the previously aforementioned pseudo-intellectual talking heads will incorporate his framework into their classrooms, nationally syndicated radio shows, books and guest appearances on Hannity. Except that when they do, they will sanitize, warp and appropriate his methodology and perspective to fit their own regurgitated WPS agenda. Worse, they will omit his praxis of informed, vulnerable community engagement that has pumped libratory energy into more young minds than can be counted, including my own. They will, for example, not discuss the implications of his decision to use his publishing royalties to support political prisoners. Ultimately, by choosing not to directly call out those members of the media, academy, and political sphere who purport Black leadership and interests while spewing the colonizing colonization of the colonizer, Ball has left the door open for each and every one of them to co-opt his blueprint for revolutionary action. Nonetheless, for everyone else, as indicated by his signature sign-off, Ball has effectively elevated the urgency and relevance of Fred Hampton’s sanctioning of peace… for those who are willing to fight for it.

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La Jornada reviews Weaponizing Anthropology.

La Jornada is one of the most widely circulated daily newspapers in Mexico City, so imagine my delight when I came across this fantastic (or so I imagined. My Spanish comprehension is deplorable) review of Weaponizing Anthropology: Social Science in Service of the Militarized State (La antropología al servicio del Estado militarizado) last week.

The review is kindly translated here by AK friend, comrade, and co-conspirator, Chuck Morse (also the brains behind the excellent translations of Paradoxes of Utopia and Durruti in the Spanish Revolution).

Check out the original version at La Jornada‘s website! There’s still time to get your very own copy at 25% off on our website.

Anthropology in Service of the Militarized State

By Gilberto López y Rivas

La Jornada

September 2, 2011

American anthropologist David H. Price has distinguished himself among his colleagues by opposing the American government’s use of anthropology in counterinsurgency warfare and neocolonial occupation, for advocating an ethical code that clearly sets out anthropologists’ responsibilities to the populations that they study, and for denouncing the mercenary use of the discipline generally.

Price recently authored Weaponizing anthropology Social Science in Service of the Militarized State (Counter Punch / AK Press, 2011). In his vital book, he confronts counterinsurgency projects advanced by teams of social scientists  (such as Human Terrain Systems) that are part of American combat units in Iraq and Afghanistan. He also challenges university programs (Minerva Consortium, Pat Roberts Intelligence Scholars Program, and Intelligence Community Centers of Academic Excellence) designed to facilitate CIA, FBI, and Pentagon incursions into American institutions of higher learning and make the social science an instrument of the American national security state, the hegemonic power in the world imperialist system that has transformed universities into obsequious extensions of its military structure.

In the introduction, titled “Anthropology’s Military Shadow,” Price argues that George Bush’s “war on terror” renewed older military uses of anthropological knowledge and adapted them to the needs of asymmetric warfare, counterinsurgency, and the occupation of regions with large ethnic or tribal groups.

The first section, “Politics, Ethics and the Military Intelligence Complex’s Quiet Triumphal Return to Campus,” provides a historical overview of anthropology’s involvement with colonization, conquest, and genocide, illustrating that the discipline is far from neutral. He points out the links between American, British, French, Dutch, and German anthropological traditions and colonial expansion in Africa, Asia, Indonesia, and indigenous territories of the Americas, showing that they have been present since anthropology’s origins. Price describes the ethical and political problems faced by anthropologists and other social scientists associated with military and intelligence agencies, and documents anthropology’s integration into university programs established to benefit the military-industrial complex.

In the second part, “Manuals: Deconstructing the Texts of Cultural Warfare,” he uses leaked and published military documents to explore new military and intelligence initiatives that seek to harness social science and apply it to current and future wars. The military manuals that he treats frame culture as an identifiable, controllable commodity that military planners and intelligence agencies can utilize to manipulate occupied and resistant populations. Price notes the absence of any appreciation of the complexities of culture in these texts, something that is present in most anthropological writings but sorely lacking here; instead, they present narratives that reinforce simplistic stereotypes about large areas of diversity—indeed, he makes it clear that military conceptions of culture rely upon the most reductionist anthropological premises. He also exposes the lack of intellectual and professional scruples among the anthropologists who compiled the latest counterinsurgency manual (Counterinsurgency Field Manual, No. 3–24), published by the University of Chicago. He reveals how they plagiarized renowned authors and discussed their work out of context. Price characterizes this as a form of academic looting.

Finally, in the last section, “Counterinsurgency Theories, Fantasies, and Harsh Realities,” he looks at contemporary uses of the social sciences to support counterinsurgency operations in the so-called “war on terror,” including in training and developing the policy of anthropological and social science teams currently working in Iraq and Afghanistan.

In Price’s view, this culturally informed counter-insurgency raises ethical, political and theoretical problems for anthropology. The ethical dilemma has to do with the manipulation of and the damage done to research populations, who should be able to voluntarily agree to be studied; the political difficulty occurs in the use of anthropological science to support conquest, occupation, and domination; the theoretical problem revolves around the application of simplistic reductionisms about culture that are designed to exploit local particularities and not only reduce conflict but also defeat insurgents.

Two questions arise from Latin America: What is the extent of such practices in our countries? What can we anthropologists and our professional associations do to reverse or at least challenge the American governments’ anthropologically informed counterinsurgency strategies?

[Translation by Chuck Morse]

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Yes, Publishers Weekly, we think Why Are Faggots So Afraid of Faggots? is great, too.

We are very excited about Mattilda Bernstein Sycamore’s new edited collection Why Are Faggots So Afraid of Faggots?: Flaming Challenges to Masculinity, Objectification, and the Desire to Conform, (available February 2012), and apparently so is Publishers Weekly, because they’ve written a glowing review, far in advance of the title’s appearance.

Why Are Faggots So Afraid of Faggots? celebrates the history of a vibrant and dynamic queer culture, and laments the loss of its exhilarating fabulousness to make way for a more corporate-cozy version of itself. But more importantly, as our mothers now watch Ellen and our friends get gay married on Bridezillas (and it’s just as bland as anything else on TV), Why Are Faggots So Afraid of Faggots? is an attempt to reclaim that thriving and flamboyant subculture and challenge assimilationist norms with its defiant faggotry!

Read the review, which appeared in the September 12th print and online issue of  Publishers Weekly, and make sure to check out the book when it comes out in February. We can hardly wait!

Why Are Faggots So Afraid of Faggots?: Flaming Challenges to Masculinity, Objectification, and the Desire to Conform

Edited by Mattilda Bernstein Sycamore. AK (akpress.org), $17.95 (224p) ISBN 978-1-84935-088-4

A distinctive collection of essays by gay and transgender activists, performance artists, and scholars embraces the subversive aspects of queer identity and rails against its “sanitized, straight-friendly version.” Some essays are personal observations of lives on the margins, such as Ezra RedEagle Whitman’s attempts to reconcile his homosexuality with Native American conceptions of manliness, or Booh Edouardo’s experiences as an autistic transgender man interacting with mainstream gay peers. Others focus more on general trends in gay culture, such as Michael J. Faris and ML Sugie’s discussion of racial preferences and prejudices on hookup sites, or George Ayala and Patrick Hebert’s examination of the role of the arts in building community among HIV positive men. Some stories are disheartening, like Matthew Blanchard’s reflections on his hospitalization and disfigurement after many years of drug-fueled indiscriminate, unsafe sex. Others are much more hopeful, like Kristen Stoeckeler’s observations on drag queen and king performers and their playful yet serious blurring of the lines between male and female. Just as the battle for LGBTQ civil rights continues, these essays—alternately moving and sprightly, contemplative and outraged—display the power of presenting an alternative to the mainstream: a world of greater tolerance, acceptance, support, and creativity. (Feb.)

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