When Sexism Became a Word

1968 and Feminism

A year can only be a snapshot, an image at best partial and at worse distorting of the complex messiness of life. For me, 1968 is indubitably a very important year. I was born in September of that year and have lived my whole life with the lingering question of ...
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When Sexism Became a Word

The #MeToo Moment and the Reproduction of Silence

Can we talk and listen at the same time?

On February 8, 2018, The New School hosted an event entitled "Sexual Harassment and Assault: Eros, Power, Violation, and Consent." Psychologist Jeremy Safran moderated a panel featuring Lew Aron and Adrienne Harris from NYU Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis, Katie Gentile from John Jay College of Criminal Justice, and ...
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The #MeToo Moment and the Reproduction of Silence

Contextualizing Catalonia

Part One on Catalonia’s constitutional crisis

In the early- to mid-twentieth century, repeated regime changes instigated the devolution of power from a centralized government to localized authorities. The desire for a stabilized, democratic form of government prevailed in the late 1970s with the fall of General Franco. Spain is comprised of seventeen autonomous regions. The Spanish Constitution of 1978, states ...
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Contextualizing Catalonia

For a Terrestrial Politics

An interview with Bruno Latour

This interview was originally published in Eurozine, February 6 2018. Between post-human globalization and nationalist withdrawal, the ecological question pushes us towards the earthly ground, argues Bruno Latour. Traditionally rejected by the Left as reactionary, ‘the question of belonging to a particular soil’ has suddenly become urgent. Camille Riquier: In 2015, you published Face ...
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For a Terrestrial Politics

Teachers Are Not Soldiers

Or, why I didn’t buy a gun after our campus shooting

Last week, I published a conversation with an old friend about the possibilities for curbing gun violence following a shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, an incident that left 17 teachers and students dead. Many other students, despite being wounded and traumatized, have stepped forward to ...
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Teachers Are Not Soldiers

Psychoanalysis and #MeToo

Reflecting on sexuality, power, desire, coercion, and consent

On February 8, 2018, the New School for Social Research hosted a panel discussion, co-sponsored by The Sandor Ferenczi Center, the New School gender studies & sexuality program and Public Seminar, entitled “Sexual Harassment and Assault: Eros, Power, Violation and Consent.” The event, designed as the first part of a ...
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Psychoanalysis and #MeToo

Re-imagining Clinical Psychology

What might a social justice-oriented clinical psychology program look like?

Disrupting injustice: An action plan to mobilize social change within psychology Introduction As students in psychology and aspiring clinicians, we feel it is pertinent to provide a space in which to focus not only on multicultural issues, but those pertaining to broader social justice initiatives and concerns. According to Goodman et ...
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Re-imagining Clinical Psychology

Brown and Blue

Further thoughts on gun violence, fascism, and resistance

"I merely took the energy it takes to pout, and I wrote some blues." -Duke Ellington I’m still moanin’ about the high school massacre in Parkdale, Florida. Moaning, and thinking. About guns, and politics, and history. The massacre was horrendous, but also distinctively compelling, insofar as the extraordinary response of the Marjory Stoneman ...
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Brown and Blue

Fantasy Fatigue

A history without historical perspective

No one attending to post-2008 politics in the United States, or to the country’s cultural and social trends since, will deny the generic presence of ignorance, unreason, or irrationalism. By 2016 and 2017, word-of-the-year nominations included“post-truth”and “fake news,” respectively. Somehow Kellyanne Conway’s “alternative facts” did not make the cut for ...
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Fantasy Fatigue

A Primary Moral Position

Black feminism and self possession

Race/isms Book Forum is a new series aimed at bringing established and emerging voices together in conversation around recent work that critically engages our world’s racial scripts, past and present. The structure of the forum is straightforward. We invite three to four thinkers to grapple with a book, highlighting a section ...
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A Primary Moral Position