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Works of Radical Imagination

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Books (164)
Authors (61)
Events (106)
March 24

December 23

March 09

June 21

What supposedly thorny journalistic questions could be simply settled by honest, unbiased inquiry? Noam Chomsky asked that very question in 2002, in his speech "The Journalist from Mars," included in the second edition of Media Control: The Spectacular Achievments of PropagandaLet's say an idealistic journalist came down from Mars, with none of the prejudices used by intellectual elites to buttress up power. What would that Martian make of global affairs and the way they're reported? How would our Martian friend report on terrorist acts in Nicaragua, Lebanon, the U.S., and elsewhere? Chomsky does his best Martian impression and informs us below.

September 18

January 25

August 31

September 28

December 21

July 05

March 31

June 05

The Seven Stories fiction list began with Nelson Algren stories, with titles like "The Face on the Barroom Floor" and "The Lightless Room." These are not exactly beach reads, nor are the books you'll find below. What you will find are novels rooted in this world, presenting the dignity of people struggling to make sense of it and in one way or another to change it.

So, this is another kind of summer fiction list. We hope you'll find much that will challenge, inspire, and engage, in times of darkness and of light.

All titles 50% off for one week only, through June 14, 5:00PM EST.

June 22

Today we celebrate what would be the 71st birthday of the late Octavia Butler, a pioneer in the world of science fiction, with "The Book of Martha," a short story from Bloodchild.

In this story, Butler works through her lack of belief in the possibility of a universally appealing utopia with humor and careful consideration. God summons Martha Bes to effectively ameliorate the conditions of humanity. As a result of the exchange, Martha settles on an original plan to satisfy God's seemingly impossible challenge.

PS: Enter to win a free copy of Bloodchild here, and take 50% off Parable of the Sower and Parable of the Talents through Saturday June 23, 11:59 PM.

August 15

February 25

January 01

February 24

October 18

The Price of the Ticket

by Kia Corthron

Originally published in the July/August 2016 issue of The Dramatist

Three years ago I was standing in the lobby of a theater, the typical Broadway cluster-mob awaiting entrance, with more than half the horde African-American. This would be logical, as the show was the musical revue After Midnight, a refurbishing of a prior concert piece entitled Cotton Club Parade celebrating Ellington-era jazz and dance. Inside, my sister and I were led to our orchestra seats, and I looked around: not another black face in sight. It took me a moment to realize that The Mystery of the Vanishing Black Folks likely would have been quickly resolved had we moved up to the balconies. But from where I sat, observing the complexion of the performers versus that of the onlookers, it was the Cotton Club, the Colors entertaining the Caucasians, and that the upper tiers may have been filled with black faces was not exactly comforting, an economically induced throwback to Jim Crow segregation with African Americans relegated to the peanut gallery.

November 09

“If there is no struggle there is no progress. . . . This struggle may be a moral one, or it may be a physical one, and it may be both moral and physical, but it must be a struggle. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and never will. Find out just what any people will quietly submit to and you have the exact measure of injustice and wrong which will be imposed upon them, and these will continue till they are resisted with either words or blows, or with both.”

—Frederick Douglass

August 27

In this excerpt from The America Syndrome: Apocalypse, War, and Our Call to Greatness, new in paperback this autumn, Betsy Hartmann discusses what has come to be called "the greening of hate"—that is, the fusion of environmentalism with anti-immigrant bigotry, an ideology which was shared by both the Christchurch and El Paso gunmen. She also touches on modern eugenics in the U.S., and stresses the need to avoid simple dualities in discussing questions of population and environment. 

April18

RESCHEDULED: This event will now take place on Thursday, April 18th at 7pm.

New Rochelle Public...

New Rochelle, NY
7.00pm
New Rochelle Public Library
October13

D. D. Guttenplan will discuss The Next Republic: The Rise of a New Radical Majority. He...

Chicago, IL
3.00pm
57th Street Books
April09

Diversity. You’ve heard the term everywherein the news, in the universities, at the...

Princeton, NJ
Labyrinth Books
November01
Lola Lafon, bestselling author of La Petite Communiste qui ne suriait jamais (The Little Communist Who Never Smiled), will be at l'Alliance Française de Westchester in White Plains for a book signing event.
White Plains, NY
7.00pm
l'Alliance Française de Westchester
February23
The eccentric fictional worlds of authors Valeria Luiselli and Guadalupe Nettel come alive on the ALOUD stage as these two leading voices in contemporary Mexican literature meet to share recent work.
Los Angeles, CA
7.15pm
Mark Taper Auditorium, Central Library, Los Angeles
April06
Meryl Danziger discusses Sing It!, her biography of Pete Seeger for young readers
New York, NY
2.30pm
Center for Living and Learning
April23
David Van Reybrouck will talk about his new book, Against Elections.
Annandale-On-Hudson, NY
6.00pm
Blithewood Manor (Levy Institute), Conference Room
October02
Join us as Harper's Magazine and Book Culture on Columbus present D.D. Guttenplan on his new book The Next Republic: The Rise of a New Radical Majority on Tuesday, October 2nd at 7pm
New York, NY
7.00pm
Book Culture
October14

Who are the new progressive leaders emerging to lead the post-Trump return of democracy in...

Seattle, WA
6.00pm
The Summit on Pike (Capitol Hill)
October16

Exactly who are the new progressive leaders emerging to lead the post-Trump return to democracy...

Berkeley, CA
7.30pm
St. John’s Presbyterian Church
November03

“The Truth Has Changed” is a solo monologue that traces the arc of American...

Chico, CA
2.00pm
El Rey Theater
October21

Every year since 1976 Project Censored, our nation’s oldest news-monitoring group has...

San Rafael, CA
2.00pm
San Rafael Store
November12

Peter Phillips, author of Giants: The Global Power Elite, and Mickey Huff, co-editor of Censored...

Sausalito, California
6.00pm
Book Passage By-the-Bay
September22

Join us for two events with Paco Ignacio Taibo II at the Brooklyn Book Festival.

Born in...

Brooklyn, NY
May27

How healthy is journalism in the United States today? Andy Lee Roth and Mickey Huff of Project...

Seattle, WA
7.30pm
Town Hall Seattle (virtual)
June17

Recent books by and about refugees have touched readers across Canada and won top literary...

Vancouver, Canada
7.00pm
Vancouver Public Library
November18

Second Read is a BPL Presents series that reevaluates canonical classic and contemporary...

Online, Internet!
7.00pm
Brooklyn Public Library (Zoom)
December15

Join us for a live recording of the Ralph Nader Radio Hour, co-hosted by Steve Skrovan and David...

Online, Internet!
12.30pm
The American Museum of Tort Law
April25

Join us in marking the publication of world-renowned activist and Egyptian political...

New York, NY
7.00pm
McNally Jackson South Seaport
May26

The Goethe-Institut New York welcomes Stefan Koldehoff and Tobias Timm, authors of Art &...

United States
5.30pm
Goethe-Institut New York