Coping After The Election

Trump year 1

Right after the election, I biked, blogged, and smoked a lot of grass. When I began coughing, I cut out the marijuana. I then joined Jen Hoffman’s Americans of Conscience Action Committee, which sends weekly emails with suggestions of what to do, from demonstrations to phone calls to letters and ...
Read More
Placeholder

How I Survived 2017

Trump year 1

On November 9, at two in the morning, I turned on the computer and saw that Clinton had lost the election. My whole body shook for hours, unlike anything I had ever experienced. In the following three days, I expressed my rage on Facebook and ultimately was unfriended by someone ...
Read More
Placeholder

Terrorism and Talk

Everyday Life and Public Seminar after the Explosion Under the Port Authority Bus Terminal, the Election of Doug Jones and “Tax Reform”

I sat down to breakfast with Naomi, my wife: she reading the paper, we listening to the news bulletins. They were still vague. It was not known yet what the cause of the explosion was. At one point, the news announcer slipped and called the incident an attack, but then ...
Read More
Placeholder

Getting Centered Since Last November 9

Trump year 1

Since last year’s election catastrophe, I continue to struggle with coping. I have increased my contributions to organizations involving reproductive justice, immigrant rights, the environment, peace, racial justice, and progressive electoral politics. I attend demonstrations at least once a month and am involved in more grassroots community and neighborhood organizations. ...
Read More
Placeholder

African American Evangelicals Vote Too

Democrats know there is more than one type of Christian voter

If ever there were an election that was lost rather than won, it was this one. In what should have been a cakewalk for the Republicans – Donald Trump won the state by twenty-eight points in 2016, after all, and Alabama hasn’t sent a Democrat to the Senate since 1992 ...
Read More
Placeholder

DREAMers and Unions Rally at the Capital

Activists take to DC streets

On December 6, about two thousand union members and immigrants rallied at the nation's capitol to demand that young immigrants be allowed to stay in the US without fear of deportation. They want a DREAM Act which will provide a pathway to citizenship for young undocumented immigrants. In September, Donald Trump announced ...
Read More
DREAMers and Unions Rally at the Capital

Title IX Investigations and Sexual Harassment at The New School

A letter from the editors of Public Seminar

A faculty member has resigned from The New School for Social Research prior to the conclusion of a Title IX investigation. We have received inquiries from faculty and students who wish to publish at Public Seminar responses and reflections about sexual harassment at our own university. This is new territory for us as ...
Read More
Placeholder

How Utopia Became a Real Estate Leaflet?

Discursive formation of branded housing projects in Turkey

When it comes to gated communities, recurrences of similar everyday life images and spatial representations in mass media form a discourse of the future everyday life. It depicts an ideal living environment that aligns neoliberalization with an idealization of private urban services, commodified forms of housing production, enclave living and ...
Read More
Placeholder

Alabama, Goddamn

Join the progressives who rallied the vote for Doug Jones

Goddamn. I mean, goddamn! I just want to come on down and hug all of you. Welcome back to Purple America, Alabama. We love you. OK -- without Wikipedia, can you name the last Senator elected as a Democrat from Alabama? If you said "Howell Heflin" you win. Heflin, who was first elected ...
Read More
Placeholder

Why the House and Senate Tax Bills Spell Disaster for Graduate Students

The GOP tax bill will raise the barrier to entry for American graduate education

Even though the measure enacted by the Senate still has to be reconciled with the House-passed version, the following repercussions are expected to occur. Firstly, the bill will affect charitable giving, which allows colleges and universities to fulfill their teaching, research and public service missions. Currently, the deductions for charitable ...
Read More
Placeholder

The Precarious Economic Lives of Older Women Workers

November 2017 Unemployment Report for Workers Over 55

Almost half (48%) of older working women without a college degree are working in low-paying jobs - earning less than $15 an hour - compared to 29% of similarly situated men.1Older women without a college degree earn a median hourly wage of $15.50 compared to $18.75 for men. One reason older women work ...
Read More
Placeholder