Showing posts with label Libraries and Infoshoppes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Libraries and Infoshoppes. Show all posts

Friday, December 02, 2011

The return of radical bookshops In a sorely troubled time for booksellers, these hubs of campaigning passion are proving surprisingly resilient. Natalie Hanman finds out why

by Natalie Hanman of the Guardian
"Things are looking up for radical books ... The problems of the past few years – shops closing, publishers folding – seem to be lifting." So runs the opening of Making the Connections: Radical Books Today, published in 1988, at the height of Margaret Thatcher's reign – but these rousing words of resistance could have been written today. For while the independent books sector in the UK has indeed been beset by bad news – independent bookshops closed at the rate of two a week in 2009, according to the Booksellers Association – the radical bookshops that have survived are witnessing a revival of interest, and are guardedly optimistic about their futures.
"In the last five to 10 years there has been a massive resurgence in interest in grassroots politics and activism," says Mandy Vere of Liverpool's radical bookshop News From Nowhere, where she has worked since soon after its launch in 1974. The shop, named after William Morris's utopian novel and run by a not-for-profit women's collective, is, she says, benefiting from the anti-globalisation movement, the anti-capitalist backlash provoked by the current financial crisis, the recent growth in climate change and green activism, and the re-energised feminist movements.
"This has created a critical mass of participation – young people and older activists, like myself – and we're noticing massively more people using the bookshop as a meeting point," Vere says. "Feminism, for example, has been very big online for a few years, and we're starting to see that resurgence come out of the blogs and into what I would call 'real life'. This year, there's a number of feminist books coming out, as well as Reclaim the Night and International Women's Day marches, which we haven't seen for a while."
Andrea Butcher of Bookmarks, a socialist bookshop in the heart of Bloomsbury, agrees. "There's a lot of resistance at the moment. [In March], a quarter of a million PCS workers went on strike. There's the railways, British Airways, the colleges, the fight against the BNP – we see a lot of people coming in and reading about the history of fighting fascism and how to take that forward in the context of the BNP. And with the credit crunch, we saw a lot of people coming in for basic economics – Marx and Engels – wanting to understand what's going on. The Communist Manifesto made an appearance in our top 10 last month, which it doesn't always! The other area of growth is feminist and women's liberation literature. There's a new group of young women getting engaged."
And it's not just buying and reading books that's feeding this seeming hunger for resistance. Radical bookshops have become venues, too: holding frequent events, from launches to lectures and pre-demonstration meet-ups; acting as a physical base where like-minded people endeavour to turn ideas into action. "Holding the events is very important because people need that area where they can get together and meet other activists and discuss these issues," says Butcher as she clears up empty wine glasses from the previous evening's well-attended in-store gathering.
But despite such positive anecdotes, radical bookshops are still clearly engaged in a struggle for survival. The sector isn't anywhere near as healthy as it was in its 1980s prime, when the now-disbanded Federation of Radical Booksellers was, says Vere, "a force to be reckoned with in the booktrade", and there were about 60 radical bookshops across the country, including Compendium, Collets, Silver Moon and Central Books in London, Grassroots in Manchester, Frontline in Leicester, Greenleaf in Bristol and Mushroom in Nottingham.
At Housmans, in Kings Cross, London – one of the longest-running radical bookshops in the country, launched by a group of pacifists – wiry co-manager Malcolm Hopkins, dressed head to toe in black, pulls up a chair in front of a row of Trotsky biographies and recounts the changes he's seen in the sector in past decades.
"Regretfully over the years we've seen a massive decline," he says. "Whereas once you could draw up a list of them, you can now count them, I would guess, on one hand. And it's a great loss. The important thing about radical bookshops is that they were more than just places that sold commodities, they were centres for activists, they held events, they encouraged people."
The story of the decline of radical bookshops will be all too familiar to followers of the independent and second-hand sector. "Amazon and the internet had a phenomenal impact," says Hopkins, "and the abolition of the net book agreement, which meant that the big stores, the chains – and specifically Amazon – could discount books ... that really hit the small independents. They just don't have the purchasing power; they can't compete on price, and they're suffering. Everybody I know who works in independent bookshops is nervous about the future."
With the mainstreaming, to a certain extent, of what was once perceived as radical politics – you're now quite likely to find the latest queer theory text, for example, in your local Waterstone's – the need for specifically radical outlets was also called into question. Now, only six members of the Booksellers Association fall into the radical/alternative category: Bookmarks, Housmans, News From Nowhere, October Books in Southampton, Radish in Leeds, and Word Power in Edinburgh. There are others, including Freedom, the anarchist publisher and bookshop based in east London, and the Cowley Club in Brighton, a co-operative run cafe and bookshop, where you're likely to bump into both anarchists and supporters of Caroline Lucas's bid to become the first Green MP.
Despite being small in number, however, there are real signs of a fightback in the radical bookselling sector, and a mounting backlash among the public against mainstream chain book stores – and mainstream politics. "A growing number of people are becoming aware of where they shop [and] more interested in ideas of how they are living," says Elaine Henry, owner of Word Power. "People are looking for something a bit different. A lot of customers come in with their printout from Amazon, which is evidence of them making a choice that they want to support an independent."
Henry isn't sure whether today's activists will want to put their energy into "ideas and books, as opposed to campaigning", but this is where the traditionally versatile radical bookshop might just have a chance to shine.
"The radical bookshops that have survived will continue to do so because we've carved out a niche," says Vere. "We've built up our reputation over the years, we've got a loyal readership, and while we can't compete in price we can offer something distinctive – knowledge, passion, meaningful books that come on trusted recommendations rather than being pushed by the publishers, and connections with other politically aware people."
Hopkins, who has witnessed waves of resistance – from gay liberation, to the battle against the violent far-right group Combat 18 – ferment in the basement of Housmans during his 30 years there, hasn't lost any of his fighting spirit. Last month, Housmans launched a new online bookshop, a "politically conscious" alternative to rival Amazon. "We can't offer the massive discounts," Hopkins says, "but if people value something they have to support it. And I get quite bored with people bemoaning the fact that their high street is desolate. If you do not use your local shops, or if you don't value places, they will go."
He has had a lot of discussions recently about whether the prospect of an incoming Conservative government might fan the flames of resistance. From his contact with young activists, he senses that "there's a tremendous level of discontent. We're hopeful that something will come of this. Each generation has to evolve it's own particular way of responding ... We would encourage people to just question everything that's going on."
Those in search of inspiration might like to head to Housmans, which is currently stocking, among the top sellers of Slavoj Zizek and Naomi Klein, copies of Starting a Bookshop: A Handbook on Radical and Community Bookselling, for just £1. Among chapters on understanding the book trade and workers' rights, there's also a detailed guide to how to put up shelves. The next revolution might start down a side street where the rent is cheap, with a hammer, some nails and a radical vision of how to do things differently.

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Happy Birthday to Left Bank Books!

Flower shop next to Left Bank Books, Pike Place Market
1907 -- US: Pike Place Market dedicated in Seattle, Washington. Current home of Left Bank Books, a collectively owned & operated anarchist bookstore still going after 25 years. Next to the flower shop at the beginning of the market, you can just see the bookstore sign. Auntie Dave worked in this collective from 1978-1995, helping found their Books-to-Prisoners project, Left Bank Distribution & Publishing, & aka Used Books.

Saturday, November 26, 2011

NYPD raid on Occupy's Zuccotti Park camp destroyed thousands of books Read more: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2011/11/23/131224/nypd-raid-on-occupys-zuccotti.html#ixzz1erezR6K4

As if I didn't have enough to be pissed off about already...


By Gianna Palmer | McClatchy Newspapers


NEW YORK — What started in September as a few piles of books on a tarp in Manhattan's Zuccotti Park, the de facto headquarters of the Occupy Wall Street movement, had grown into a full-fledged outdoor library with 5,000 volumes and an online catalogue by November.

On Wednesday, a group of library workers and supporters of The People's Library, as it's known among Occupy protesters, gathered in midtown Manhattan to discuss what had become of the library during the Nov. 15 eviction of protesters from Zuccotti Park ordered by New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg.
The event was held around a conference table covered in library books from the park in varying states of damage — torn, wrinkled, coverless and even mangled. Among the books visible on the table were a leather-bound copy of the Bible, a collection of Chinese mythology and a volume of selected poems by Allen Ginsberg. The speakers present shared their collective disgust with the raid that had destroyed the donation-supported library in Zuccotti Park.

"Today we are here questioning the appropriateness and the legality of the confiscation of approximately 4,000 books," said former New York Civil Liberties Union director Norman Siegel, who hosted and moderated the event. Siegel said that 1,275 books of the 4,000 books seized had been recovered; of those, one-third were damaged to the point of being unusable. He estimated that 2,725 books had been destroyed.

The self-appointed Occupy librarians said that many of the books were not easily replaced, including signed copies, handmade publications and a special edition.

"Our nation's poet laureate, Philip Levine, came in the morning before the raid and donated and signed a copy of his book, 'What Work Is,'" said Stephen Boyer, 27, an Occupy librarian who had been living and working in the library until Nov. 15. Boyer held up the book, displaying its damage. "The NYPD and Bloomberg trashed it," he said.

Mayor Bloomberg's office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Boyer said that he'd been at the library on Nov. 15 when the New York Police Department ordered occupiers out about 1 a.m. Besides his personal belongings and an armful of poetry anthologies, Boyer said he was unable to rescue much else from the library.

"I just got what I could in one load and that was all I could save," Boyer said, adding that once he had left, the police wouldn't let him back into the park to take more books.


In a photo posted to Twitter on Nov. 15, Mayor Bloomberg's office showed piles of books, neatly stacked on a table and arranged in plastic bins below. The accompanying message said that property from the park, including the Occupy Wall Street library, was being "safely stored" in a sanitation facility and would be available for pickup the next day.

When protesters went to retrieve the books from the sanitation facility the next day, they said that the only books they found in good condition were those shown in the Twitter photo. The other books retrieved from a back room by sanitation workers were in much worse shape, said Michele Hardesty, 33, one of the protesters who had gone to retrieve the books.

"It was clear from what we saw at sanitation that our books were treated like trash," Hardesty said.

Speakers at the event called on Bloomberg to acknowledge that a wrong had been committed and to guarantee that similar actions would never occur again.

They also asked that Bloomberg replace the books and provide a space for the People's Library to be recreated.

Mandy Henk, 32, a librarian at DePaul University, said she saw the library's destruction as an attempt to silence and destroy the Occupy movement.

"What kind of a people are we if we can't create a public space in which people can come and share books with each other? In which people can come and share ideas with each other?" she said. "Who are we as a country if we don't have room for that?"

(Palmer is a McClatchy special correspondent in New York.)


Read more: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2011/11/23/131224/nypd-raid-on-occupys-zuccotti.html#ixzz1erfJrylO

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Library closures challenged in court


Campaigners are seeking a ruling that decisions to close six libraries in the London borough of Brent are legally flawed.
The Brent case is expected to be followed in the near future by similar challenges to library cuts proposed by Gloucestershire and Somerset county councils, and on the Isle of Wight.
Nick Cave, Depeche Mode, the Pet Shop Boys and Goldfrapp are among those who have contributed to campaign legal costs.
Playwright Alan Bennett launched a scathing attack when he spoke at a church benefit to raise legal funds to save Kensal Rise library, one of the six under threat in Brent. He compared the loss to ''child abuse''.
Brent campaign lawyers yesterday applied for judicial review, arguing council officers unlawfully failed to assess local needs and the likely impact of closing half the borough's libraries.

This is a map of library closures in the U.K.

FBI releases files on controversial booksellers Paladin and Loompanics

catalogsforbookspaladinloompanics.jpg

The FBI has released its files on two famously controversial publishers, Paladin Press and Loompanics Unlimited, following a FOIA request filed by Government Attic. The files suggest that the booksellers' huge libraries of books on drugs, guns and other ultra-libertarian issues only rarely drew the FBI's attention.

Though their catalogs were similar, Loompanics stood out for its countercultural style, whereas Paladin specialized in republishing declassified military guidebooks and the like. When Loompanics wound up operations in 2006, Paladin acquired part of its back catalog.

The FBI's files on Paladin Press date back some forty years, and reveal an early 1970s investigation into the classification status of the U.S. government materials that Paladin republished. Since then, however, the release shows that the bureau took little interest in it except to execute procedural inquiries on behalf of foreign investigators.

The Loompanics file is much the same. Concluding that the organization and its publications were legal, the FBI only revisited it to conduct inquiries triggered by hand-wringers and foreign cops.

Paladin Highlights

• In the early 1970s, the FBI looked into of how Paladin got hold of various government documents. A la "Wow, we declassified that? Huh."

• In 1983, a recipient of an unsolicited catalog for Paladin's books sends an angry letter to their senator, expressing disbelief "that something like this could exist in this country." The senator asks the FBI to investigate it "because of the desire of my office to be responsibe to all inquiries." The FBI: "Our review failed to find any violation of federal law ... the Paladin press has been brought to our attention in the past."

• After a Paladin video tape was found in the possession of a murder victim in Liverpool in 1997, the coppers there ask the U.S. Embassy if these guys ship guns or silencers to England or something. The FBI checks it out. Paladin says it only sells media, and refuses to provide general customer info on privacy grounds, but will do so for specifically-named suspects or victims. Once given the info, it reports that it has no records of any of them.

• Australia gets upset when Paladin republishes stuff from its classified military manuals. The resulting FBI investigation asks Paladin, where did you get that? Paladin says it bought the original manuals in a bookstore in Sidney, Australia. The FBI takes a motrin and fixes itself a drink.

Loompanics Highlights

• A typical FBI response to an inquiry from whomever: "AGAIN THIS IS NOT CLASSIFIED OR RESTRICTED MATERIAL ... THESE ITEMS ARE POSSIBLY OF INTEREST TO TERRORISTS OR EXTREMISTS, BUT, AS ALL ARE IN THE PUBLIC DOMAIN OF THE U.S., POSSESSION OF SUCH ITEMS CONSTITUTE NO VIOLATION OF LAW."

• In 1984, the FBI interviewed the "owner" of Loompanics (i.e. Mike Hoy) in order to identify a particular subscriber to Loompanics who was a suspect in a criminal investigation. He was concerned about government intervention in his business but "reluctantly" advised that in order to get on the subscriber list, you had to buy a book. The FBI concluded that he violated no laws through the operation of his mail-order bookselling business.

• In the 1980s, police in Germany make an inquiry about the origins of Loompanics materials owned by locals who, "with the help of these materials ... have been attempting to create dissention." The books were "Total Resistance", "Psychedelic Chemistry" and "CIA Improvised Sabotage Devices".

You can download the files at Government Attic's Department of Justice documents page.

Monday, July 11, 2011

Sushi Tribe: Bellingham's Alternative Library


The Bellingham Alternative Library is an educational cooperative and lending library which is run by and for its members. We work to support any manifestation of a counter-culture and maintain a space free of oppression. Our goal is to provide a community of passionate learning, whether that be in place of a traditional education or in addendum to it. We have over 2728 items that have been checked out 6903 times.

Located at
717 N. Forest St.
Hours: 2 pm - 7 pm

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Last Word Books Granted One Day Moratorium on Evergreen State College Campus Bookselling Monopoly!

Last Word Books & Last Earth Distro will be on Red Square slingin' books in full force on Saturday, May 22nd thanks to the organizers of Synergy for finagling us a one-day moratorium on the bookseller ban (why grant a failing business a monopoly? must be the American Way). See: http://www.counterpointjournal.org/story/cxpj-issue/november-2009/bookstore-bans-books

Of course, we aren't allowed to sell any Angela Davis books and we can only be there from 11-4. Which means we're not bringing the book dome this year. But we've got a few aces up our sleeves that should prove especially bitter-sweet to corporate rats most concerned with justifying their own bloated salaries.

That's aimed at you sir! Thanks a lot Ken Danis (The relatively new Evergreen Bookstore manager), you saboteur and local bookseller-outer. You could have gone about stealing our ideas in a much more professional and polite manner than corporate, institutional subterfuge, you fuck. In five years time we'll have your job and do it twice as well for half the cost and three times the profit. Read it and weep.

That was an especially nice touch when you swept the Friends of the Evergreen Library Contract out from under us. Have fun yelling at your interns to dig faster through that veritable mountain of shite for the few nuggets of gold. You're smart to be insourcing, but you're just another greedy douche-bag more interested in self-preservation than community and you're doing more harm than good.

The Karmic scales are definitely not tipped in your favor, you backstabber. Why not tackle the issue of students undermining your business through Amazon.com instead of alienating a good percentage of your local, previously-loyal customers and business-associates? Your predecessors had an excellent relationship with us and you, ha! you didn't even try, asshole. Reap the whirlwind.

Angela Davis and Antwi Akom Speak!

May 22 | 3:30 p.m. doors open, 4:30 p.m. – 12 p.m.

Location: The Evergreen State College, CRC

Ticket Information:

• $5 ADVANCE TICKETS for ANY students, staff, & faculty of ANY school w/school i.d.:
(Available at the Evergreen Bookstore or online @ http://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/110928)

• $15 ADVANCE TICKETS for general public:
(Available at the Rainy Day Records or online @ http://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/110928)

• DAY OF SHOW:
$20 at the Door for everyone

AngelaDavisposter

For more information on the event, please see the Facebook event

angelaABOUT ANGELA DAVIS (Author, Educator and Activist):

Through her activism and her scholarship over the last decades, Angela Davis has been deeply involved in our nation’s quest for social justice. Her work as an educator – both at the university level and in the larger public sphere – has always emphasized the importance of building communities of struggle for economic, racial, and gender equality.

Professor Davis’ teaching career has taken her to San Francisco State University, Mills College, and UC Berkeley. She has also taught at UCLA, Vassar, the Claremont Colleges, and Stanford University. She has spent the last fifteen years at the University of California Santa Cruz where she is Professor of History of Consciousness, an interdisciplinary Ph.D program, and Professor of Feminist Studies.

Angela Davis is the author of eight books and has lectured throughout the United States as well as in Europe, Africa, Asia, Australia, and South America. In recent years a persistent theme of her work has been the range of social problems associated with incarceration and the generalized criminalization of those communities that are most affected by poverty and racial discrimination. She draws upon her own experiences in the early seventies as a person who spent eighteen months in jail and on trial, after being placed on the FBI’s “Ten Most Wanted List.” She has also conducted extensive research on numerous issues related to race, gender and imprisonment. Her most recent books are Abolition Democracy and Are Prisons Obsolete? She is now completing a book on Prisons and American History.

Angela Davis is a member of the executive board of the Women of Color Resource Center, a San Francisco Bay Area organization that emphasizes popular education – of and about women who live in conditions of poverty. She also works with Justice Now, which provides legal assistance to women in prison and engages in advocacy for the abolition of imprisonment as the dominant strategy for addressing social problems. Internationally, she is affiliated with Sisters Inside, a similar organization based in Queensland, Australia.

Like many other educators, Professor Davis is especially concerned with the general tendency to devote more resources and attention to the prison system than to educational institutions. Having helped to popularize the notion of a “prison industrial complex,” she now urges her audiences to think seriously about the future possibility of a world without prisons and to help forge a 21st century abolitionist movement.

ABOUT ANTWI AKOM (Award Winning Educator, Scholar and Writer):antwi

Antwi Akom is a leading expert on the green economy, climate change, and educational equity. His research focuses on the links between race, environmental health, and educational equity in cities and schools; the role of the green economy in facilitating pathways out of poverty for vulnerable populations; and the role of local knowledge in the production of environmental health and educational equity.

Dr. Akom’s research and practice works to build partnerships between local residents, schools and universities, environmental and educational experts, community based organizations, labor unions, green businesses, and city planners working together to generate policy and planning solutions that improve community health, economic mobility, and the pedagogies and practices of community leaders and decision-makers.

Professor Akom is currently working with The California Endowment and a number of non-profit organizations to conceptualize a set of “Emerald city” projects and develop a set of “Green Health Equity” indicators; all aimed at promoting human health, job creation, and environmental sustainability.

He is also working with the Ella Baker Center, the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, and the East Bay Green Corridor to create “Green Education Technology” (GET) academies that attract and engage students, especially low-income students, students of color, and other vulnerable populations who have been marginalized by the educational system, for career pathways into existing and emerging green energy careers.

In 2009, Professor Akom co-founded the Environmental Sustainability Planning Network (ESPN), a national learning and climate change action network working to improve the lives of residents in seven cities across the United States. The project team, which includes the California Center for Civic Participation, the Youth Planners Network, the Lawrence Berkeley Hall of Science, and the Global Metropolitan Studies Initiative at U.C. Berkeley, are drafting local and regional climate action plans and policies aimed at significantly reducing carbon emissions, securing land tenure, and improving economic opportunities, infrastructure and improving environmental health. The team is also conducting a youth participatory action research project culminating in the production of an Environmental Justice Bill of Rights.

Professor Akom is a 2010 recipient of a RIMI Investigator Award in Health Disparities Research from the National Center on Minority and Health Disparities. He is currently co-editing a book with Professor Jason Corburn from U.C. Berkeley’s College of Environmental Design/City Planning entitled Revolutionary Urbanism: Race, Climate Justice, and the Politics of Pollution in Cities and Schools, which explains the nature of climate change in urban communities in the United States and abroad, the ways in which cities and schools in the global north and global south are responding to climate change, and the potential role for public and private partnerships to mitigate and adapt to the climate crisis.

Additionally, he is working on his first solo authored book, Ameritocracy: The Racing of our Nations School Children. He has received research support for his work from the National Institutes of Health, The David and Lucille Packard Foundation, the Nathan Cummings Foundation, The Charles Mott Foundation, The California Endowment, and the National Science Foundation.

He has also served as a consultant on community based participatory action research processes and outcomes with major philanthropic organizations, departments of public health, school districts, and community based organizations in the United States as well as abroad. Professor Akom has held research appointments at the University of California, San Francisco, and UC Berkeley’s Institute for the Study of Social Change.

Friday, September 11, 2009

Upcoming Internships @ Last Word Books


Stay tuned Evergreen students. Our forces are currently crafting over half a dozen self-perpetuating internship positions at Last Word Books to satisfy your college credits and worrying parents, and we write poetic evaluations of the highest quality.

Potential Positions Becoming Available:

Media Guru: Advertising, Marketing & Public Relations, Networking, Graphic Design, Blogging & Web Presence Maintenance

Puppet Master: Vounteer & Events Coordinator

Big Boss: Independent Bookstore Floor Management, Business Management

Library Scientist: Online & In-Store Inventory Management, Shelving, Categorization, Photography of Books

Bookie: Bookkeeping, Finances, Taxes, Charitable Donations, Insurance

Internship Coordinator & Evergreen State College Liason: Networking with the college and overall synergistic umbrella manager of internship program

Print Master: Management of Full-Service Print Shop and Publishing Company, Binding, Distribution, Marketing

Retail Poets: Folks who want to do creative theatre retail and table on road trips while self-documenting, performing, teaching.

Book Angel: Books to Prisoners Liason, Nonprofit work, Social Sciences, Maple Lane & Green Hill Book-Rehab Diagnostician

Please feel free to contact our corporate headquarters and ignorance fallout shelter in downtown Olympia with questions, offers, favors, ideas, money, food, beer, poems, whatever. Check our new website for contact information and lots more: www.lastwordbooks.org.

Thursday, March 08, 2007

Evergreen Infoshoppe Gets A Firm Foothold in 2007

This gang of ass-kicking rebel Evergreeners have been working at this for a few years now and it seems they've gotten it off the ground! Nice work everybody. Let us know how we can better knit The Infoshoppe, Last Word and the 'Zine Library together. I'll pop in and check out your new pad one of these days. - Sky


Earlier this month, a student-run non-profit infoshop celebrated its grand opening at The Evergreen State College (TESC) in Olympia, Washington. Using the guise of a state funded student group, volunteers of The Evergreen Infoshoppe were allotted over $4,000 to purchase radical books, zines, and videos for their lending library and resource center. After only a few weeks of planning, the Infoshoppe now hosts an ever-growing collection in a permanent, centrally located and nearly autonomous location.