Reading The Second Sex in the Age of #MeToo

Where are we coming from, and where do we go?

In the firestorm of debates about the implications of #MeToo, feminist activists and commentators have found themselves circling around the definitions of a handful of essential terms: rape, harassment, assault, consent. We have seen the word “pleasure” disentangled, and the word “inappropriate” expanded. We have discussed power and victimhood, empowerment ...
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Reading The Second Sex in the Age of #MeToo

A Rising Employment Rate Means Fewer Sidelined Workers

New York City’s long rising economic tide

Economic theory suggests that sustained periods of low unemployment should produce an array of broadly enjoyed job market benefits. Not only will more people have jobs: their wages should also rise; overall poverty should subside; and general economic conditions for the traditionally disadvantaged should improve. Unfortunately, reality doesn’t always conform to ...
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A Rising Employment Rate Means Fewer Sidelined Workers

Free Speech or Free Riding?

Janus v AFSCME before the Supreme Court

A thousand people rallied outside the Supreme Court the morning of January 26 while the Justices heard oral argument on Janus v. AFSCME Council 31 inside. The decision in this case will have profound effects on public service unions. Currently 22 states require employees who do not choose to join a union ...
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Free Speech or Free Riding?

Women of the World Unite?

Radical, Liberal and Conservative Feminism, and Democracy

In the wake of the International Women’s Strike, I feel a need to express my support of “the feminism of the ninety nine percent,” but also of “lean-in feminism,” and “conservative feminism” (if there is such a thing), fully aware that they do not support each other. Such is my ...
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Women of the World Unite?

The Power of Black Women’s Political Labor Remembered

Bennett College and the Civil Rights Movement 

Greensboro, North Carolina, is best known for the 1960 sit-ins that sparked a massive student movement to desegregate the South. Despite not being fully acknowledged as leaders in that movement, Black women students from Bennett College were vital to the political climate that made the sit-ins possible and sustained the ...
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The Power of Black Women’s Political Labor Remembered

Writing about Factual Media in an Age of Extremes

Our ‘Manhattan Project’ moment

Several months ago, my friend and colleague Daniel Kreiss and I were discussing something extraordinary: communication research, and communication researchers, suddenly seemed to be everywhere. Prompted by the role played by digital platforms in the election of Donald Trump and the undeniable power of media and communication companies in establishing ...
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Writing about Factual Media in an Age of Extremes

International Women’s Strike

March 8th 2018 will be the second IWS

March 8th, We Strike! New York is an affluent city, rich in many ways, a global hub of business, finance and commerce, and home for the highest number of billionaires. However, it is not the top 1% who keep this city alive, but the millions of workers. Their labor is essential ...
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International Women’s Strike

Is Women’s Solidarity Possible?

To be a successful movement, feminism has had to ignore its failure with conservative women

Tomorrow is International Women's Day. Don't do housework—let men do it (that is, should you own a man: we don't at my house, so we would have to rent or borrow one.) Don't do paid work. Don't shop—except at female and minority-owned small business (should you be able to locate ...
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Is Women’s Solidarity Possible?

A Global Strike for a Global City

A call to action on March 8th

New York City is often called the “center of the world”, the multicultural and multiethnic city, the city that never sleeps, the big apple loved by tourists and film-makers. But a different reality hides behind the glitter and the glamour. It is the reality of the exploited labor of millions ...
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A Global Strike for a Global City

From Casting Director to Failed Coup

Unseating the Turkish military

The most recent period of competitive democratic politics in Turkey was bookended by two coups: those of 1980 and 2016. If the first heralded the re-organization of politics under the supervision of the military, the second instigated the transition to a civilian autocracy. The significance of the failed coup of ...
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From Casting Director to Failed Coup

How Castoriadis read Weber

Meaning, values, and imaginary institution

I. The interest Cornelius Castoriadis had in Max Weber’s work, although quite apparent and confessed by the philosopher himself, has not drawn sufficient attention by scholars and commentators. [1] It is no coincidence that the first and the last texts Castoriadis published while living both deal with Weber. The first of these was ...
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How Castoriadis read Weber