84 episodes

Brought to you by Loughborough University’s Anarchism Research Group (ARG), Anarchist Essays presents leading academics, activists, and thinkers exploring themes in anarchist theory, history, and practice.

Anarchist Essays ARG

    • Society & Culture
    • 5.0 • 7 Ratings

Brought to you by Loughborough University’s Anarchism Research Group (ARG), Anarchist Essays presents leading academics, activists, and thinkers exploring themes in anarchist theory, history, and practice.

    Essay #82: David Christopher, ‘Early Cronenberg and the Anarchist Apocalypse’

    Essay #82: David Christopher, ‘Early Cronenberg and the Anarchist Apocalypse’

    In this essay, David Christopher explores and unpacks the mutually anarchistic and apocalyptic propensities in the early films of David Cronenberg. Christopher positions Cronenberg's films as exemplary of an innovative new methodology of cinema analysis for films following Cronenberg's influence. For more on these topics, see Anarchist Studies 32.1.
    Dr Christopher is a Lecturer in Popular Screen Cultures at the University of Leicester for the School of Arts, Media, and Communication. 
    David's most recent publications are:
    Flexing Armageddon: Displacing Climate Change Anxiety through Soft Power Nationalist Interests in GuoFan’s The Wandering Earth, Brill - Youth and Globalization Journal: Cultural Production in Asia, Spring 2024. DOI - tba.
    Horror and the Cube Films: An Unlikely Vehicle for the Negotiation of Nationalist-Cultural Ideologies, Mutual Images – On Politics of Visual Media, Issue 11 (2023-24): pp. 139-170. (Co-edited and with and Introduction by Dr. David Christopher and Dr. Marco Pellitteri, pp. 53- 59). https://www.mutualimages-journal.org/index.php/mi/issue/view/11/14.
    Anarchist Essays is brought to you by Loughborough University's Anarchism Research Group and the journal Anarchist Studies. Follow us on Twitter @arglboro.
    Our music comes from Them'uns (featuring Yous'uns).
    Artwork by Sam G.
     

    • 18 min
    Essay #81: Andrew Whitehead, ‘The Anarchist Big Three and the Siege of Sidney Street’

    Essay #81: Andrew Whitehead, ‘The Anarchist Big Three and the Siege of Sidney Street’

    In this essay, Andrew Whitehead examines the two most lethal incidents linked to anarchism in London's history: the murder of three police officers during an attempted armed robbery at Houndsditch in December 1910 and the ensuing siege of Sidney Street in Stepney. He looks particularly at the links between the mainly Latvian perpetrators and three anarchist luminaries then living in exile in London, Peter Kropotkin, Errico Malatesta and Rudolf Rocker. 
    Andrew Whitehead is an honorary professor at the University of Nottingham and an associate editor of History Workshop Journal. His latest book A Devilish Kind of Courage: Anarchists, Aliens and the Siege of Sidney Street, was published by Reaktion Books in March 2024.
    Anarchist Essays is brought to you by Loughborough University's Anarchism Research Group and the journal Anarchist Studies. Follow us on Twitter @arglboro.
    Our music comes from Them'uns (featuring Yous'uns).
    Artwork by Sam G.

    • 21 min
    Essay #80: Jayne Malenfant & Hannah Brais, 'An Anarchist Approach to Housing Precarity'

    Essay #80: Jayne Malenfant & Hannah Brais, 'An Anarchist Approach to Housing Precarity'

    In this essay, Jayne Malenfant and Hannah Brais unpack an anarchist approach to confronting housing precarity by bringing together existing anarchist scholarship while proposing housing interventions that support agency, anti-colonial work, and justice. They confront the inadequacy of existing housing interventions and propose an alternative vision that aligns with anarchist values of solidarity, agency, prefigurative politics, and harm reduction.
    Jayne Malenfant is an Assistant Professor at McGill University in Tio'tia:ke/Montreal. Their work focuses on housing, homelessness, community-led research and anarchist education.
    Hannah Brais is a doctoral candidate at McGill University in Tio’tia:ke/Montreal. Her work focuses on improving practices and policies for people experiencing homelessness.
    Anarchist Essays is brought to you by Loughborough University's Anarchism Research Group and the journal Anarchist Studies. Follow us on Twitter @arglboro.
    Our music comes from Them'uns (featuring Yous'uns).
    Artwork by Sam G.

    • 17 min
    Essay #79: Sean Scalmer, ‘Direct Action: The Invention of a Transnational Concept’

    Essay #79: Sean Scalmer, ‘Direct Action: The Invention of a Transnational Concept’

    This essay examines the rise of 'direct action' as a key concept in anarchist and radical politics over the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. It traces the transnational arguments, texts and networks that made this possible.
    Sean Scalmer is a Professor of History at the University of Melbourne. This essay is a greatly edited version of a recent article: 'Direct Action: Invention of a Transnational Concept', International Review of Social History, vol. 68, no. 3, December 2023, pp.357-87. (An open access version is here).The research and the essay forms part of a research project on 'Direct Action and Democracy: Utopia, Experience, Threat', funded by the Gerda Henkel Stiftung.
    Anarchist Essays is brought to you by Loughborough University's Anarchism Research Group and the journal Anarchist Studies. Follow us on Twitter @arglboro.
    Our music comes from Them'uns (featuring Yous'uns).
    Artwork by Sam G.
     

    • 32 min
    Essay #78: Sam C. Tenorio, ‘Black Cataclysm: Anarchism and Ruination’

    Essay #78: Sam C. Tenorio, ‘Black Cataclysm: Anarchism and Ruination’

    In this essay, adapted from his recently published book, Sam C. Tenorio (he/they) reconsiders the Watts Rebellion of 1965 and its ruinous disruptions, like arson, theft, and vandalism, as a cataclysm that clears material and discursive ground and proffers its own questions of property. It argues that the cataclysmic vantage of the Watts rebellion overflows on a state narrative meant to misapprehend both the political subjectivity of Black people and their conditions of possibility.
    Sam C. Tenorio is Assistant Professor in African American Studies and Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at Penn State University. He writes about carcerality and black radical practice as well as black trans and trans of color critique. His most recent publications are Jump: Black Anarchism and Antiblack Carcerality (NYU Press) and “White Carceral Geographies” (South Atlantic Quarterly). 
    Anarchist Essays is brought to you by Loughborough University's Anarchism Research Group and the journal Anarchist Studies. Follow us on Twitter @arglboro.
    Our music comes from Them'uns (featuring Yous'uns).
    Artwork by Sam G.

    • 18 min
    Essay #77: Nolan Bennett, ‘Alexander Berkman’s Anti-Prison Anarchism’

    Essay #77: Nolan Bennett, ‘Alexander Berkman’s Anti-Prison Anarchism’

    In this essay, Nolan Bennett traces through Alexander Berkman's 1912 Prison Memoirs of an Anarchist an unresolved tension between two approaches to the prison: advocacy for political prisoners and advocacy against the politics of prisons. Berkman's ambivalence between these approaches amid his memoirs and later activism signify the book's importance and point toward enduring tensions in contemporary prison politics.
    Nolan Bennett is a political theorist and assistant professor of Democracy and Justice Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay. Nolan's most recent publications are "The Ambivalence of Alexander Berkman's Anti-Prison Anarchism" and "George Jackson's Perfect Disorder."
    Anarchist Essays is brought to you by Loughborough University's Anarchism Research Group and the journal Anarchist Studies. Follow us on Twitter @arglboro.
    Our music comes from Them'uns (featuring Yous'uns).
    Artwork by Sam G.

    • 24 min

Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5
7 Ratings

7 Ratings

Top Podcasts In Society & Culture

Miss Me?
BBC Sounds
How To Fail With Elizabeth Day
Elizabeth Day and Sony Music Entertainment
Unearthed - Nature needs us
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew
The Louis Theroux Podcast
Spotify Studios
Desert Island Discs
BBC Radio 4
Life with Nat
Keep It Light Media

You Might Also Like

The Verso Podcast
Verso Books
What's Left of Philosophy
Lillian Cicerchia, Owen Glyn-Williams, Gil Morejón, and William Paris
Death Panel
Death Panel
Bad Hasbara - The World's Most Moral Podcast
Matt Lieb
Tech Won't Save Us
Paris Marx
Revolutionary Left Radio
Revolutionary Left Radio