Next week we’ll kick off October by beginning what will hopefully end up being a complete reading over the coming months of a true classic: Raoul Vaneigem’s The Revolution of Everyday Life. One of the high water marks of Situationism, a profound influence on “second-wave”/type 3 anarchisms, and an under-acknowledged example of egoist thought, this is a reading I’m very stoked to discuss with all of you. Each and every page of this text gives us ample material to unpack, so for this first reading let’s go from the introduction through the first section of “The Impossibility of Participation: Humiliation” — in other words, stopping at the section titled “Isolation”. Looking forward to hearing everybody’s thoughts on this seminal howl of revolt and refusal!
Mitch Jeserich, host of KPFA’s Letters and Politics, speaks on the importance of public broadcasting and the art of conversation.
Mitch Jeserich is a veteran broadcast journalist. In 2009 he launched a pilot program called Letters from Washington, chronicling the first 100 days of the Obama administration, that would become Letters and Politics—a look at burning political issues and debates and their historical context within the US and the world.
You must register for this free online event, hosted by the Magazines and Newspapers Center of the San Francisco Public Library. All events at the SF Public Library are free to the public.