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Against Equality: Queer Critiques of Marriage

July 19, 2011

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The gradual creep of the gay liberation movement toward assimilation dates back to the mid-1970’s. Yet, so does the critique of the process. Debate about the limitations of a gay agenda organized around marriage, military service and increasingly punitive hate crimes laws dominated the SexPanic! meetings in the late 1990’s in New York.

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Colorblind: The Rise of Post-Racial Politics and the Retreat from Racial Equity

June 10, 2011

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Tim Wise opens his compelling and formidable book with words from Barack Obama’s famous 2004 speech to the Democratic National Convention: “There’s not a black America, and a white America and Latino America and Asian America; there’s the United States of America.”

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AK Press Working Classics Series

May 12, 2011

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Anyone looking to educate themselves on the history and principles of anarchism should look no further for a starting place than the books in AK Press’s Working Classics series. The series as a whole represents some of the finest writings on anarchist theory and practice ever published

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Clandestine Crossings: Migrants and Coyotes on the Texas-Mexico Border

May 4, 2011

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Among the villains in the crosshairs of the Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) 2012 Fiscal Year budget are coyotes, the “smugglers” migrants often hire to help them enter the United States without authorization.

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Rhetoric for Radicals: A Handbook for 21st Century Activists

April 22, 2011

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Rhetoric for Radicals is about organizing, activism, and radicalism; in short, it’s a comprehensive text for changing the world. This book approaches activism as a rhetorical labor and argues in a concise, yet substantive, five chapters that effective radicalism must involve sound rhetorical practice.

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Mad Bomber Melville

March 8, 2011

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With the publication of Mad Bomber Melville, Leslie James Pickering has done a great service for those who—as he puts it—“can take inspiration from someone who was far from perfect but never gave up the struggle” (133). Pickering’s biography of Sam Melville does not seek to idolize its subject but is an honest effort to preserve an important history which holds challenging lessons for present day readers.

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Abolition Democracy: Beyond Empire, Prisons and Torture

March 6, 2011

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Angela Davis is an icon of the highest sense, an icon critical of their own iconic status. From her rise as a critical socio-political force in the late 1960’s to her still defiant role as an activist-academic, Davis is a great example of protracted struggle met with theory and praxis.

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