Tuesday, 4 December 2012 - 17:30 in EST
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Brown University, CIT 165
Please join us in welcoming Marina Sitrin, author of "Everyday Revolutions" for a talk entitled "From Crisis to Horizontal Prefiguration – Argentina to Occupy"
Professor Sitrin will discuss how recent movements in Latin America and in many other areas of the globe have developed with the same two features: horizontal relationships and the construction of new territories in which these new social relationships are developed and expanded. This focus on direct democracy and new social relationships is central to what the new movements are abo
Professor Sitrin will discuss how recent movements in Latin America and in many other areas of the globe have developed with the same two features: horizontal relationships and the construction of new territories in which these new social relationships are developed and expanded. This focus on direct democracy and new social relationships is central to what the new movements are abo
ut
and how they organize. Sitrin’s talk will address what has been taking
place with the U.S. Occupy movements, along with the movements in Greece
and Spain, focusing on the new forms of horizontal social
relationships. She will then contextualize these movements in post-2001
Argentina – where in the wake of an economic crisis people by the
hundreds of thousands formed horizontal assemblies, recuperated
workplaces, and began to rethink their relationship to work and value.
The talk will also draw upon some of the challenges faced in Argentina
and with the global justice movement, so as to help suggest ways in
which we can together think of the possible futures for the current
movements.
Marina Sitrin holds a PhD in Global Sociology and a JD in International Human Rights and is a postdoctoral fellow with the Committee on Globalization and Social Change at the CUNY Graduate Center. She is the author of Everyday Revolutions: Horizontalism and Autonomy in Argentina (2012, Zed), editor of Horizontalism: Voices of Popular Power in Argentina (2006, AK Press) and co-author, with Dario Azzellini, of Occupying Language: The Secret Rendezvous with History and the Present (Adelante Alliance) and the forthcoming They Can’t Represent Us! Reinventing Democracy from Greece to Occupy (Verso Press).
This event is the third in the "Global Resistance to Neoliberalism" series, which is sponsored by a Graduate International Colloquium Fund grant from the Office of International Affairs at Brown University. This event is also co-sponsored by The Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies.
Marina Sitrin holds a PhD in Global Sociology and a JD in International Human Rights and is a postdoctoral fellow with the Committee on Globalization and Social Change at the CUNY Graduate Center. She is the author of Everyday Revolutions: Horizontalism and Autonomy in Argentina (2012, Zed), editor of Horizontalism: Voices of Popular Power in Argentina (2006, AK Press) and co-author, with Dario Azzellini, of Occupying Language: The Secret Rendezvous with History and the Present (Adelante Alliance) and the forthcoming They Can’t Represent Us! Reinventing Democracy from Greece to Occupy (Verso Press).
This event is the third in the "Global Resistance to Neoliberalism" series, which is sponsored by a Graduate International Colloquium Fund grant from the Office of International Affairs at Brown University. This event is also co-sponsored by The Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies.



1 comment:
It was good to come across your blog and get to know about Marina Sitrin on "Argentina to Occupy" @ Brown University USA
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