Organizers often forget the importance of the imagination. Though cadre may be able to articulate points in Capital, it’s the masses who dream for brighter futures for their children that provide the numbers movements need to succeed. And when things look difficult, the imagination helps keep participants focused. One example of this observation was the protest effort in Oaxaca, Mexico.
Tag Archives: art
We Shall Not Be Moved: Posters and the Fight Against Displacement in L.A.’s Figueroa Corridor
April 28, 2009
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Gentrification is one of those great battles the working class continues fight on a regular basis. Not that it has much of a choice. Urban desirability and the quest for community in cities across the United States have turned many a block into “neighborhoods in transition,” condominium war zones where the enemy combatants are the less well-to-do.
Chicana and Chicano Art: ProtestArte
April 13, 2009
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Mao Tsetung was famously quoted as saying there was no such thing as art for art’s sake, or art detached from politics. In Chicana and Chicano Art: ProtestArte, Carlos Francisco Jackson probes such concepts, as well as their limits.
Social justice-oriented creative expressions have proven a transformative force in many eras, from the Black Arts Movement to the explosion of Mexican-American humanities from the 1940s to 1970s.



May 19, 2009
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