Showing posts with label Reading. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reading. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Excellent article from The Guardian

Neil Gaiman: Why our future depends on libraries, reading and daydreaming

A lecture explaining why using our imaginations, and providing for others to use theirs, is an obligation for all citizens


'We have an obligation to imagine' … Neil Gaiman gives The Reading Agency annual lecture on the future of reading and libraries." Photograph: Robin Mayes
It's important for people to tell you what side they are on and why, and whether they might be biased. A declaration of members' interests, of a sort. So, I am going to be talking to you about reading. I'm going to tell you that libraries are important. I'm going to suggest that reading fiction, that reading for pleasure, is one of the most important things one can do. I'm going to make an impassioned plea for people to understand what libraries and librarians are, and to preserve both of these things.
And I am biased, obviously and enormously: I'm an author, often an author of fiction. I write for children and for adults. For about 30 years I have been earning my living though my words, mostly by making things up and writing them down. It is obviously in my interest for people to read, for them to read fiction, for libraries and librarians to exist and help foster a love of reading and places in which reading can occur.

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

If well used, books are the best of all things; if abused, among the worst -- Emerson


Ralph Waldo Emerson (May 25, 1803 – April 27, 1882) was an American essayist, lecturer, and poet, who led the Transcendentalist movement of the mid-19th century. He was seen as a champion of individualism and a prescient critic of the countervailing pressures of society, and he disseminated his thoughts through dozens of published essays and more than 1,500 public lectures across the United States.
Emerson gradually moved away from the religious and social beliefs of his contemporaries, formulating and expressing the philosophy of Transcendentalism in his 1836 essay, Nature. Following this ground-breaking work, he gave a speech entitled The American Scholar in 1837, which Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. considered to be America's "Intellectual Declaration of Independence".[1]
Emerson wrote most of his important essays as lectures first, then revised them for print. His first two collections of essays – Essays: First Series and Essays: Second Series, published respectively in 1841 and 1844 – represent the core of his thinking, and include such well-known essays as Self-RelianceThe Over-SoulCirclesThe Poet and Experience. Together with Nature, these essays made the decade from the mid-1830s to the mid-1840s Emerson's most fertile period.
Emerson wrote on a number of subjects, never espousing fixed philosophical tenets, but developing certain ideas such as individualityfreedom, the ability for humankind to realize almost anything, and the relationship between the soul and the surrounding world. Emerson's "nature" was more philosophical than naturalistic; "Philosophically considered, the universe is composed of Nature and the Soul."
While his writing style can be seen as somewhat impenetrable, and was thought so even in his own time, Emerson's essays remain among the linchpins of American thinking, and Emerson's work has greatly influenced the thinkers, writers and poets that have followed him. When asked to sum up his work, he said his central doctrine was "the infinitude of the private man."[2]

Friday, February 24, 2012

10 Best Slacker Novels

Though we’re sure he’s no slouch himself, Adam Wilson sure knows a thing or two about the intricacies of slackerdom. His debut novel Flatscreen, which hit shelves this week, is the hilarious story of professional slacker Eli Schwartz — perpetually stoned, uncomfortably doughy, cheerfully lewd — who is forced to face up to certain facts of life (and required to put on pants) when his (parents’) home is purchased by an aging, sex-addicted ex-TV star in a wheelchair. As you might imagine, hijinks ensue, most of which are relatively unflattering to our friend Eli, but he manages to slouch and whine his way towards a satisfying conclusion. Since he’s the expert, we asked Wilson to tell us about his all-time favorite literary slacker novels — click through to check out his (also very funny) list, and then be sure to tell us about your own preferred misanthropic reads in the comments!
Wilson says: “I’ve always thought of Jesus Christ — the New Testament’s long-haired itinerant carpenter and struggling magician — as the first literary slacker He drank a lot of wine and never wore pants; he was into holistic healing; he could be preachy and moralistic, but was a good guy deep down. And to think they strung him up for it. Society’s attitude toward slackers hasn’t softened much.”

How Bots Seized Control of My Pricing Strategy

Before I talk about my own troubles, let me tell you about another book, “Computer Game Bot Turing Test”. It's one of over 100,000 “books” “written” by a Markov chain running over random Wikipedia articles, bundled up and sold online for a ridiculous price. The publisher, Betascript, is notorious for this kind of thing.
A story about computer science 
and other improbable things. 

It gets better. There are whole species of other bots that infest the Amazon Marketplace, pretending to have used copies of books, fighting epic price wars no one ever sees. So with “Turing Test” we have a delightful futuristic absurdity: a computer program, pretending to be human, hawking a book about computers pretending to be human, while other computer programs pretend to have used copies of it. A book that was never actually written, much less printed and read.
The internet has everything.
This would just be an interesting anecdote, except that bot activity also seems to affect books that, you know, actually exist. Last year I published my children's book about computer science, Lauren Ipsum. I set a price of $14.95 for the paperback edition and sales have been pretty good. Then last week I noticed a marketplace bot offering to sell it for $55.63. “Silly bots”, I thought to myself, “must be a bug”. After all, it's print-on-demand, so where would you get a new copy to sell?
Then it occured to me that all they have to do is buy a copy from Amazon, if anyone is ever foolish enough to buy from them, and reap a profit. Lazy evaluation, made flesh. Clever bots!
Then another bot piled on, and then one based in the UK. They started competing with each other on price. Pretty soon they were offering my book below the retail price, and trying to make up the difference on "shipping and handling". I was getting a bit worried.
The punchline is that Amazon itself is a bot that does price-matching. Soon after the marketplace bot's race to the bottom, it decided to put my book on sale! 28% off. I can't wait to find out what that does to my margin. (Update: nothing, it turns out. Amazon is eating the entire discount. This is a pleasant surprise.)
My reaction to this algorithmic whipsawing has settled down to a kind of helpless bemusement. I mean, the plot of my book is about how understanding computers is the first step to taking control of your life in the 21st century. Now I don't know what to believe.
It's possible that the optimal price of Lauren Ipsum is, in fact, ten dollars and seventy-six cents and I should just relax and trust the tattooed hipster who wrote Amazon's pricing algorithm. After all, I no longer have a choice. The price is now determined by the complex interaction of several independent computer programs, most of which don't actually have a copy to sell.
But I can't help but think about that old gambler's proverb: “If you can't spot the sucker, it's you.”

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Ann Patchett

Novelist Ann Patchett discusses the importance of brick-and-mortar bookstores and explains what prompted her to open Parnassus Books in Nashville.

Monday, January 30, 2012

Is the term 'e-book' redundant?

At last the world of publishing and booksellers is waking up. As we trailed in a previous issue, the e-book is a term that should be dropped in favour of an 'epub' - thus distancing the product from the real book. At the Digital Book World Conference 2012, Barnes & Noble's Jim Hilt, noted, "The idea that the print book is going to die some slow long death is actually a fallacy. This may come across as self-serving, coming as it does from a bookseller. But there's also a great deal of self-service at work when investors, employees and owners of digital publishing companies repeat the mantra print is dead, print is dead."
  ''What's more, the term 'book' has been co-opted by content creators who have little investment in what is traditionally known as a 'book,' possibly in order to lend their work some gravitas and authority.'' Read more


Also, just a reminder, you can buy your eBooks through Last Word via our Google Affiliate Program!

Friday, December 09, 2011

Writer Alan Moore and Artist David Lloyd Will Contribute to Occupy Comics Anthology

Lifted from http://technoccult.net/ - thanks Klintron!
Wired reports:
godkiller occupycomics blackflag Alan Moore and Will Contribute to Occupy Comics Anthology
Nearly 30 years after publishing V for Vendetta, writer Alan Moore and artist David Lloyd are throwing their support behind the global Occupy movement that’s drawn inspiration from their comic’s anti-totalitarian philosophy and iconography.
Moore will contribute a long-form prose piece, possibly with illustrations, to the Occupy Comics project. His writing work will explore the Occupy movement’s principles, corporate control of the comics industry and the superhero paradigm itself.
Lloyd signed onto the growing Occupy Comics project last week, as did Madman’s Mike Allred and American Splendor’s Dean Haspiel. Occupy Comics will eventually sell single-issue comic books and a hardcover compilation, but an innovative arrangement with Kickstarter means that funds raised through pledges of support can be channeled directly to Occupy Wall Street’s populist ranks now.
You can check out the Occupy Comics website and the project’s Kickstarter for more details including a full list of contributors.
See also:

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.

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

Daily Bleed Radical Literary History and Anarchist Day Book for November 26th

Cat Has Had the Time of His Life
thin line
Our Daily Bleed...

"Delia"Kenneth Rexroth
California rolls into
Sleepy summer, & the air
Is full of the bitter sweet
Smoke of the grass fires burning
On the San Francisco hills.



NOVEMBER 26

HERMANN GORTER
Pioneering Dutch Council Communist, poet

FESTIVAL OF BIG TALK.
Ganja Land


FESTIVAL OF SHADOW ECONOMIES.

US: NATIONAL DAY OF MOURNING FOR AMERICAN INDIANS.

IT HAS BEEN SAID DAY:

"All bleeding eventually stops"

       — HerrDr.Prof. Vladimir, Texassican



dancing mouse, animated
1731 -- William Cowper — poet, translator of Homer, editor of Milton — lives, Great Berkhampstead Rectory in Hertfordshire: "I have no more right to the name of a poet than a maker of mousetraps has to that of an engineer." 

A better mousetrap, on wheels


1792 -- US: American anti-slavery & suffragist activist Sarah Grimke lives.


1855 -- US: "Wakarusa War," a series of armed skirmishes between pro-slavery "Border Ruffians" from Missouri, & Kansas Free State men, erupts near Lawrence, Kansas.


1862 -- US: On meeting Harriet Beecher Stowe, author of Uncle Tom's Cabin, Beloved & Respected Comrade Leader President Able Lincoln comments:
"So this is the little lady who made the big war."

http://showcase.netins.net/web/creative/lincoln.html



1864 -- US: Major Scott Anthony orders Cheyennes, living near Fort Lyon in Colorado for protection from vigilantes, to move, precipitating the Sand Creek Massacre of 29 November.
http://www.pbs.org/weta/thewest/resources/archives/four/sandcrk.htm


Lewis Carroll
1864 -- Lewis Carroll sends the handwritten manuscript of Alice in Wonderland to 12-year-old Alice Liddell as an early Christmas present.


1864 --Dutch poet, council communist Hermann Gorter lives, Wormerveer. Developed the literary revolution known as "the movement of the Eighties." His first book, a 4,000 verse epic poem called Mei ("May"), is regarded as the pinnacle of Dutch Impressionist literature.
http://www.marxists.org/archive/canne-meijer/1927/obituary.htm
http://libcom.org/tags/Herman-Gorter
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herman_Gorter


cat Button
1865 -- Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland published.


In Alice in Wonderland Carroll pokes fun at organized religion's attempts to control chronological time with a thinly veiled attack on the Christian debates over the correct day for celebrating Easter:
"Fourteen of March, I think it was," he said.

"Fifteenth," said March Hare.

"Sixteenth," said the Dormouse.

"Write that down," the king said to the jury; & the jury eagerly wrote down all the three dates on their slates, & then added them up, & reduced the answer to shillings & pence"


See also 25 August & 21 March.

http://lcsna.org/carroll/
http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/lcarroll.htm



1868 -- US: Ignoring orders to kill only warriors, a US Army contingent led by Beloved & Respected Comrade Leader General Custer massacres 103 sleeping Cheyenne — including Black Kettle, a survivor of the Sand Creek Massacre — in the so-called "Battle of the Washita," Oklahoma Territory.
http://www.pbs.org/weta/thewest/resources/archives/four/sandcrk.htm


1882 -- Peter Kropotkin begins publishing his ideas on anarchist communism during this month. [I don't have the exact date — ed.]
Kropotkin's first major contribution was in the area of popular expropriation. In November & December 1882, he published a series of articles on the subject, arguing that a libertarian communist revolution would not succeed unless everything that could be used to exploit the people was immediately expropriated & socialized for the benefit of all.



1883 -- US: Black emancipationist Sojourner Truth dies, Battle Creek, Michigan. Poet, freedom fighter, feminist, abolitionist & former slave.
SOJOURNER TRUTH
Freed slave, emancipationist, feminist, social activist. Daily Bleed Saint 1998



1883 -- US: Supreme Court declares 1875 Civil Rights Act unconstitutional.


1895 -- France: Arthur Arnould (1833-1895) dies. French journalist, novelist, anarchist member of First International & the Paris Commune, friend of Michael Bakunin. Arnould wrote L'Etat et la Révolution (1877), a history of the Paris Commune, & numerous novels as A. Matthey. See the Anarchist Encyclopedia page,http://recollectionbooks.com/bleed/Encyclopedia/ArnouldArthur.htm


1909 -- Eugène Ionesco lives. Romanian-born French dramatist whose one-act anti-play The Bald Soprano (1950) inspired the Theater of the Absurd (see also: Samuel Beckett, Alfred Jarry). Since the 1970s his writing has mainly been non-theatrical.
http://www.bopsecrets.org/rexroth/sfe/1960/03.htm


1910 -- France: Une honte ! (Edition spéciale de "Vérités" du 26 novembre 1910).
"Ils étaient douze, douze brutes, douze gribouilles: 12 jurés ont condamné à mort un innocent: [Jules] Durand. Le distillateur d'alcool, on le fait décorer. Le capitaliste, on le fait statufier. Le syndicaliste, on le fait guillotiner. La République française inflige au monde entier un pareil scandale ? C'est une honte ! Alors Camarade réfléchis ! Durand qui est le premier martyr du syndicalisme, maudit par la bourgeoisie, ne doit pas éveiller en toi qu'un simple juron à l'adresse de ses bourreaux. II faut que tout ton être vibre violemment, il faut que tu recherches les vrais coupables du meurtre qui se prépare, il faut qu'à ce tableau de chasse nulle autre victime ne soit inscrite.

Et le jour où ton syndical te dira "Lève-toi" n'hésite pas !"
pop1('trombi/personnes Click for larger image 
Click image for larger version; images courtesy L’affaire Durand

http://endehors.net/news/jules-durand-l-affaire-dreyfus-du-pauvre


1911 -- Death of Paul Lafargue (Karl Marx's bum of a son-in-lawson-in-law). Went to Spain in a foolish effort to counter the Bakuninist ideas spread there by Giuseppe Fanelli. No anarchist he, but he's not all bad — after all, he wrote The Right to Be Lazy in 1893 while in prison. Translated & published by Charles Kerr publishing coop in Chicago, 1907 (updated version expanded & edited by Bernard Marszalek, 2011).


Fuck Work

PAUL LAFARGUE 1997 SAINT 29 MARCH
Karl Marx's bum of a son-in-law, the lay-about author.

"Hélas! Les loisirs que le poète païen annonçait ne sont pas venus; la passion aveugle, perverse et homicide du travail transforme la machine libératrice en instrument d'asservissement des hommes libres : sa productivité les appauvrit."


http://righttobelazy.com/introduction/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Right_to_Be_Lazy
 


1911 -- 
anarchist Black RoseUS: The anarchist-feminist Emma Goldman lectures, in New York City, on "Mary Wollstonecraft the Pioneer of Modern Womanhood."


1912 -- US: Emma Goldman speaks at a meeting organized by Almeda Sperry in New Kensington, Pa., followed by meetings over the next four days in Pittsburgh, New Castle, & McKees Rocks. 


1914 -- US: Emma Goldman lectures on "The War & 'Our Lord,'" in Grand Rapids, Mich., organized by William Buwalda of the Analyser Club. From the 29th to December 6, in St. Louis, Emma delivers eight English & two Yiddish lectures to receptive audiences.



1914 -- England: Battleship HMS Bulwark explodes at Sheerness Harbor, 788 die.


1920 -- Russia: Red Army led by "Snowball" (Trotsky's name in Orwell's Animal Farm) & Kamenov murdersMakhnovist anarchist delegation under a flag of truce & attacks agrarian commune federation.


Makhno's anarchist delegation




1922 -- Dust Buster?: Howard Carter opens the tomb of Tutankhamen.
The tomb of The Boy King, Tutankhamen, was discovered in Egypt by Lord Carnarvon of England & Howard Carter of the United States. The find was called, "The greatest archaeological discovery of all time." People in America, desiring brevity in identifying great things before they forget, shortened the name to "Tut." Critics of the grave-robbers cluck, tut-tut.



1924 -- Mongolian People's Republic proclaimed.


1930 -- Argentina: Adolfo Pérez Esquivel, co-founder of Servicio Paz y Justica, recipient of the Pope John XXIII Peace Memorial while in prison, lives. Winner of the 1980 Nobel Peace Prize.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adolfo_P%C3%A9rez_Esquivel


1941 -- Japanese carrier force left its base & moves east toward Pearl Harbor, never to be seen again.


1945 -- England: "Save Europe from Starvation" rally, London.


1956 -- Famed swing-era band leader & trombonist Tommy Dorsey dies, the result of an accident in his Greenwich, Connecticut home.


3-D skull
1956 -- USSR: Single sculls winner Vyacheslav Ivanov wins Olympic gold medal. In his excitement he jumps for joy & loses his medal as it sinks to the bottom.



1965 -- Judy Collins performs, with guest Mimi & Dick Fariña, White Plains, NY.
pop1('http://recollectionbooks.com/bleed/images/BB/poster-judy-dick-mimi-65.jpg Judy Collins poster; source www.richardandmimi.com 
Click image for larger version
http://www.richardandmimi.com/ads.html




1966 -- UnEasy Rider?: Peter Fonda is among 100 arrested in Los Angeles during protest of a 10 P.M. curfew in Sunset Blvd. entertainment district.

The Juice is Loose T-shirt
1968 -- US: O.J. Simpson is named football's Heisman Trophy winner for 1968.
A running back for the University of Southern California, amassing 3,187 yards in 18 games & 33 touchdowns in two seasons. Plays professional football with the Buffalo Bills & San Francisco 49ers, then a sportscaster & actor. More recently obsessed with tracking down the killer of his wife, presumably linked to the greens, which he now haunts.




?
1968 -- Cream gives its last concert at the Royal Albert Hall, London. The crowd chants "God save the Cream." Clapton & drummer Ginger Baker continue to work together in Blind Faith.


1968 -- Uncle?: U.N. passes Resolution Against Capital Punishment. Guess who ignores it?


1968 -- US: Robert R. Smith, President of San Francisco State College, resigns. S.I. Hayakawa named acting president.


1968 -- Vietnam: After stalling for months, the South Vietnamese government agrees to join in the Paris peace talks.
[Source: WholeWorld is Watching]


1969 -- US: Crap Shoot — Military draft lottery established.


1973 -- Albert DiSalvo, Boston Strangler, stabbed.


1973 -- 
anarchist diamond; anarquistaMéxico: Spanish-Mexican anarquista Miguel Giménez Igualada (1888-1973) dies. CNT member, anarcho-syndicalist & then deeply influenced by the individualist Max Stirner. Author, publisher & editor during the Spanish Revolution & after words. With the defeat of the revolution he took refuge in France, Argentina, Uruguay & Mexico.
http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miguel_Gim%C3%A9nez_Igualada
http://fal.cnt.es/?q=biblio/author/Gim%C3%A9nez+Igualada



1976 -- Sex Pistols release their debut single "Anarchy In The UK."
Sid Vicious, Anarchy in the UK

Sex Pistols logo

ANARCHY IN THE U.K.

RIGHT! NOW HA,HA

I WANNA BE ANARCHY
IT'S THE ONLY WAY TO BE

IS THIS THE M.P.L.A. OR
IS THIS THE U.D.A. OR
IS THIS THE I.R.A.
I THOUGHT IT WAS THE U.K.
OR JUST ANOTHER COUNTRY
ANOTHER COUNCIL TENANCY

I WANNA BE ANARCHY
I WANNA BE ANARCHY
OH WHAT A NAME

AND I WANNA BE AN ANARCHIST
GET PISSED
DESTROY!

Fiddling Raccoon, animatedOKAY, songsters, rockers, punkers, highbrows, opera buff(e)s, folkies fans, wannabes & other pretenders....

BleedSongMeisterAuntieDave put together a music quiz for aging & aspiring anarchists & rockers, to test your heavy mettle, at the "Research on Anarchism" site in France, for all & (a)sundry...

Take the quiz!, cheat, swear, sweat, bang your head on the wall, see how you fare!!


http://recollectionbooks.com/bleed/Encyclopedia/Music@Quiz/quiz_2002_1.html




1983 -- England: Heathrow Airport, robbed of 6,800 gold bars worth $38.7 million.

Nice huge air balloon line drawing
1991 -- US: Condoms are handed out to thousands of NY High School students.




1991 -- US: Red Plots? Custer Battlefield Nat'l Monument in Montana is renamed Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument. Reservations may be required. & the parking lot, of course, is mostly occupied by Winnebagos & Jeep Cherokees. Damn militants.


1993 -- Israeli troops shoot to death Palestinian guerrilla leader Khaled Mustafa Zer in the Arab Jerusalem suburb of Sur Bahir.
This is the third killing, in eight days, of opponents of a September 13 peace accord between Israel & the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO). On November 24 in Gaza, Israeli troops killed Imad Aqal, the founder & commander of Izzedine el-Qassem & a legendary figure among Palestinians. Yesterday, in the most widespread & violent protests since the accord, Palestinian rebels stoned soldiers from behind burning barricades.



1994 -- US: Hole in One?
A Wilmington, N.C., neurosurgeon's license was suspended after he left a patient's brain exposed for 25 minutes while he got lunch. The state medical board said neurosurgeon Raymond Sattler, 50, forgot the names of surgical equipment & told a nurse to drill holes in a patient's head & work on the outer brain even though she was not trained to do so.

— "Washington Post", A16, 26 Nov 1994
http://www.panix.com/~clay/stupid/hole.html

Nobody for President: Alfred E. Neuman
2000 -- US: Florida... 

Colorful clock
2000 --
WARNING !!!WARNING !!! WARNING !!! 

Prepared To Meet Thy Chipmaker??? Only 35 shopping days left until Big Dooom Y2K . . .

!!!
http://www.nicorinc.com/gas/consumer_news/jan_y2k.html
http://www.spunk.org/library/writers/woodcock/sp001734.html
 


2005 -- The British government suppresses further details of the 2004 Bush/Blair memo, wherein Beloved & Respected Comrade Bombardeer President George Bush expressed his desire to bomb al-Jazeera TV in Qatar (also the location of the United States Central Command conducting the war on Iraq), because of its unvarnished reporting on the war on Iraq. US bombs previously hit al-Jazeera "accidentally" in Afghanistan & Iraq.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al_Jazeera_bombing_memo
http://www.tompaine.com/articles/2006/01/10/did_bush_want_to_bomb_al_jazeera.php
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2006/jan/17/broadcasting.Iraqandthemedia



2008 -- India: Mumbai terrorist attack begins, lasting three days, killing 166 people & wounding at least 300. CIA, DEA agent & FBI-protected David Coleman Headley & Pakistan's ISI are involved in planning the coordinated attacks.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2008_Mumbai_attacks
videohttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=14cKZyRYL7g
videohttp://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/david-headley/


Fink Beer
3001 --

"Thanks for a nation of finks. Thanks for a nation where nobody is allowed to mind their own business."

      — Billy Burroughs, exterminator, suspect reprobate, "Thanksgiving"


Rat Fink package




I didn't go to work today!
4502 -- Anarchist CALENDAR

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