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"Victoria" Anarchist Reading Circle

Reading for Revolution

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Author: Daisy

September 1: Kuwasi Balagoon

Posted on August 24, 2024 by Daisy

In early preparation for September’s upcoming  Bi Visibility Week, we have chosen readings that centre the admirable bisexual freedom fighter Kuwasi Balagoon.  While the two readings don’t place especial emphasis on Balagoon’s orientation, they do provide a thorough overview of his contributions to the struggle for Black liberation in the 70s and 80s.  Both texts, Maroon: Kuwasi Balagoon and the Evolution of a Revolutionary New Afrikan Anarchism by Akinyele K. Umoja and Kuwasi at 60 by Kazembe Balagun, chronicle Balagoon’s daring acts of insurgency.  Their scope includes Balagoon’s time before and after joining the Black Panther Party, his organizing in prison, and his later criticisms of the Black Panther Party from an anarchistic standpoint.  These accessible historical accounts are sure to stoke more curiosity about the revolutionary figure and time period they illuminate.

Maroon and Kuwasi at 60, respectively, can be downloaded below this paragraph.  Alternatively, Maroon and Kuwasi at 60 can both be read online or printed in zine format courtesy of the Anarchist Library.

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Maroon: Kuwasi Balagoon -- Akinyele K. Umoja

1 file(s) 112.36 KB
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Kuwasi at 60 -- Kazembe Balagun

1 file(s) 53.60 KB
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As always, we meet at Camas Books and Infoshop, 2620 Quadra Street, on unceded Lekwungen Territory at 6:30pm on Sunday September 1st.

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Posted in Black History, Revolutionary Theory

August 18: Security Culture

Posted on August 14, 2024 by Daisy

Good security practices are essential to effective, sustainable organizing.  We have decided to review these practices by reading two zines about security culture, Security Culture: A Handbook for Activists and Confidence.  Courage.  Connection.  Trust: A Proposal for Security Culture.

Both act as concise overviews of the basics when it comes to security culture.  Each zine also provides extra insight into a particular area of the concept: Confidence.  Courage.  Connection.  Trust offers practical strategies for maintaining confidentiality in real-life scenarios, with a focus on navigating relationships.  Its suggestions are bolstered with anecdotes from the author about their personal experience using the strategies presented.  The unique insights of Security Culture: A Handbook for Activists, meanwhile, include an overview of different arms of law-enforcement and intelligence agencies run by the Canadian state, as well as a brief guide to informants and infiltrators.  Together, these two short readings offer activists a firm foundational education in strong security practices.

Both Confidence.  Courage.  Connection.  Trust. and Security Culture: A Handbook for Activists can be obtained from The Anarchist Library.  Both plain-text and imposed zine format are available for each reading.  For the sake of convenience, plain-text PDFs of each can also be downloaded off this webpage just below:

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Confidence. Courage. Connection. Trust.

1 file(s) 83.22 KB
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Security Culture: A Handbook for Activists

1 file(s) 98.40 KB
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As always, we meet at Camas Books and Infoshop, 2620 Quadra Street, on unceded Lekwungen Territory at 6:30pm on Sunday August 18th.

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Posted in Activism, Police & Policing, Practical Guides

August 4: Fascism & Anti-Fascism

Posted on July 26, 2024 - July 27, 2024 by Daisy

For August 4th, our reading group will be focusing on two pieces about fascism and authoritarianism.

With eyes turned to the US and an election upcoming in BC as well, it seems important that we familiarize ourselves with how fascism manifests, and how it can be combatted.

The zine Forming an Antifa Group focuses on the latter subject.  Self-explanatory and to-the-point, it provides a guide to creating a squad for antifacist action.  Some considerations touched upon are security, Antifa principles, and some of the work assumed of groups operating under the name.

The other reading is New Democracy: The New Face of State Violence in Greece from Crimethinc, which consists of an interview with a Grecian anarchist from the anarchist neighbourhood Exarcheia. In 2019, when the interview took place, the party ‘New Democracy’ had just taken power in Greece and consequently begun targeting anarchists and immigrants.  The unnamed interviewee describes some of these attacks, as well as other pressures facing the community, such as Air BnB encroaching on Exarcheia, and infighting.

‘Forming an Antifa Group’ can be downloaded as a PDF below.  It is also available off the Anarchist Library ready to print as a zine.

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Forming an Antifa Group

1 file(s) 3.38 MB
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‘New Democracy’ is similarly available in imposed zine format on the Anarchist Library.  A plain PDF version is attainable here:

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New Democracy: State Violence in Greece -- Crimethinc

1 file(s) 68.28 KB
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In total, the readings are a relatively modest 18 pages. Those who find themselves finishing early are encouraged to look further into an aspect of the topics that catches their interest.  This will hopefully lead to a richer conversation on Sunday.  Anyone who wishes to is invited to come to the Atrium at 800 Yates St. on Aug. 4, from 2:50 to 5 pm, to join Scholecule for a session of self-guided research.

As always, we meet at Camas Books and Infoshop, 2620 Quadra Street, on unceded Lekwungen Territory at 6:30pm on Sunday August 4th.

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Posted in Anarchist Societies, Anti-Fascism, Practical Guides, Theory/Praxis

July 21: People’s Poetry

Posted on July 15, 2024 by Daisy

Seeking to continue interrogating academic institutions, in step with the Palestinian liberation movement, we have chosen a reading that criticizes power structures within and surrounding universities.  The essay, entitled ‘People’s Poetry’, comes from andrea bennett’s collection Like a Boy but Not a Boy, and places scrutiny on the response to UBC’s investigation of Steven Galloway back in 2016.  bennet examines the event in parallel with another from Canadian literature’s history, illustrating a pattern of how certain voices are devalued by established authors and academics in favour of their own.  The reader is called to consider how the impulse to protect some people can further disempower others, and how the burden of proof is handled surrounding accusations of sexual assault.

A PDF of the reading can be acquired here:

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(andrea bennett) People's Poetry

1 file(s) 4.29 MB
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As always, we meet at Camas Books and Infoshop, 2620 Quadra Street, on unceded Lekwungen Territory at 6:30pm on Sunday July 21st

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Posted in UncategorizedTagged Universities

July 7: Octavia Butler’s Bloodchild

Posted on July 3, 2024 - July 4, 2024 by Daisy

We will be discussing a short horror story written by Octavia Butler.

The story, entitled Bloodchild, explores the relationship between a colony of humans in space and their alien hosts, known as the Tlic. The story develops this dynamic by focusing on the experiences of the narrator, his family, and his Tlic partner, exploring themes of power, autonomy, and manufactured dependence.

Content warning: From descriptions in the text, the Tlic are essentially humanoid centipedes, and reproduce parasitically.  This may be disturbing to those with a fear of bugs.  The story also involves scenes and discussions of body horror, which may be disturbing to those with bodies.  Please proceed with caution, and feel free to skip this reading if you find the subject matter needlessly upsetting.

For those still interested in reading Bloodchild, it can be obtained here as a PDF:

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(Octavia Butler) Bloodchild

1 file(s) 100.81 KB
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As always, we meet at Camas Books and Infoshop, 2620 Quadra Street, on unceded Lekwungen Territory at 6:30pm on Sunday July 7th.

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Posted in Fiction, UncategorizedTagged Black authors, Sci-fi, Short stories

June 23: ‘Emergent Strategy’ & ‘Stories of the Bear People’

Posted on June 19, 2024 - June 19, 2024 by Daisy

Join us on June 23rd to again discuss two readings, another fiction and another nonfiction.

Stories of the Bear People is a collection of short stories written by Aragorn!, expanding on the anarchist mythology begun in Stories of the Raccoon People.  True to the title, this anthology focuses on another archetype encountered in the world of activism, here taking the metaphorical shape of bears.  The succinct and playful tales explore the role such people play in movements for change.

Adrienne Maree Brown’s Emergent Strategy is a guidebook on just, effective organizing inspired by natural phenomena.  The three sections we have agreed to read are Fractals, Interdependence & Decentralization, and Intentional Adaptation.  They each elaborate on the concept that is their namesake, framed by anecdotes of where Brown has found the concept relevant in her own life.  This writing style makes for a very personal piece that seeks to resonate emotionally with the reader.

Emergent Strategy can be downloaded as a PDF here:

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(Adrienne Maree Brown) Emergent Strategy

1 file(s) 717.33 KB
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Stories of the Bear People can be downloaded from The Anarchist Library in screen or in comic imposed zine PDF format.  Stories of the Raccoon People is also a part of this file, but rest assured that Stories of the Bear People starts around the halfway point.

As always, we meet at Camas Books and Infoshop, 2620 Quadra Street, on unceded Lekwungen Territory at 6:30pm on Sunday June 23rd.

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Posted in Fiction, Theory/Praxis

June 9: ‘Towards Freedom: Points of Departure’ & ‘Stories of the Raccoon People’

Posted on May 31, 2024 by Daisy

On June 9th, we will be discussing two short readings, one fiction and one nonfiction.

Towards Freedom: Points of Departure is a section from Crimethinc’s anthology From Democracy to Freedom. In line with the book’s aim to explore the meaning and limitations of democracy, this essay presents ways in which the concept can be expanded so as to create true equality in decision-making. Its various sections succinctly cover approaches to creating institutions, conflict resolution, and navigating political differences, aiming to foster both autonomy and responsibility with its proposals for each topic.

The 10 short tales in Stories of the Raccoon People, authored by Aragorn!, seek to spark the creation of an anarchist mythology. Through lighthearted allegory, the stories describe the joys, struggles, and hidden truths that underlie the anarchist experience. As Aragorn! lays out in the preface to the book, the hope is that these myths “pass into the hands of the Raccoon people themselves and are shared through song and transform through the memory of the people into the truths I can only peek at.”

Towards Freedom: Points of Departure can be attained as a PDF here:

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(Crimethinc) Towards Freedom: Points of Departure

1 file(s) 377.87 KB
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Stories of the Raccoon People is available for download The Anarchist Library as in screen or impose zine format.  Note that we are only reading Stories of the Raccoon People, it is not necessary to read Stories of the Bear People as well.

As always, we meet at Camas Books and Infoshop, 2620 Quadra Street, on unceded Lekwungen Territory at 6:30pm on Sunday June 9th.

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Posted in Fiction, Theory/Praxis

May 26: The Anarchism of the Occupy Movement

Posted on May 17, 2024 - May 26, 2024 by Daisy

 

For our next reading, we are going to be reviewing what happened during the Occupy movement of 2011 in order to gain insight for the current student occupations happening across North America in solidarity with Palestine. The reading can be obtained here:

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Anarchism of the Occupy Movement - Morgan Rodgers Gibson

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and is also available as an imposed zine PDF.

As always, we meet at Camas Books and Infoshop, 2620 Quadra Street, on unceded Lekwungen Territory at 6:30pm on Sunday May 26th.

 

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Posted in History Behind Current AffairsTagged Occupy movement, Palestine solidarity

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