58 episodes

A podcast about the politics of health, medicine, and the body.


Support at www.buymeacoffee.com/redmedicine

Red Medicine Red Medicine

    • News

A podcast about the politics of health, medicine, and the body.


Support at www.buymeacoffee.com/redmedicine

    The Revolutionary Movements of the 1970s w/ Michael Hardt

    The Revolutionary Movements of the 1970s w/ Michael Hardt

    Michael Hardt analyses the revolutionary political movements of the 1970s and what they might teach us about political struggle, social transformation, and liberation.

    Michael Hardt teaches political theory in the Literature Program at Duke University. He is co-author, with Antonio Negri, of the Empire trilogy and, most recently, Assembly. He is co-director with Sandro Mezzadra of The Social Movements Lab. His most recent book is The Subversive Seventies (Oxford University Press.)

    • 1 hr 24 min
    Feeling Bad, Politically w/ Hannah Proctor

    Feeling Bad, Politically w/ Hannah Proctor

    Hannah Proctor explains why it’s important to understand the messy, emotional, and interpersonal aspects of political struggle.

    Hannah Proctor is a Wellcome Trust Research Fellow at the University of Strathclyde in Glasgow, interested in histories and theories of radical psychiatry. She is a member of the editorial collective behind Radical Philosophy, and has been published in Jacobin, Tribune, The New Inquiry and elsewhere. Her most recent book is Burnout: The Emotional Experience of Political Defeat (Verso Books)

    EVENT INFORMATION: https://bit.ly/3yu9zBl

    SUPPORT: www.buymeacoffee.com/redmedicine
    Soundtrack by Mark Pilkington
    Twitter: @red_medicine__
    www.redmedicine.substack.com/

    • 1 hr 21 min
    Is Your Landlord Trying to Kill You? w/ Nick Bano

    Is Your Landlord Trying to Kill You? w/ Nick Bano

    Nick Bano explains how landlords and the state collaborate to produce the housing crisis, generating harm and violence in the process of wealth accumulation.

    Nick Bano is an author and Barrister who specializes in representing homeless people, residential occupiers, and destitute and migrant households. He has written for Tribune, the New Socialist, and Jacobin. He is the author of Against Landlords: How to Solve the Housing Crisis.

    SUPPORT: www.buymeacoffee.com/redmedicine
    Soundtrack by Mark Pilkington
    Twitter: @red_medicine__
    www.redmedicine.substack.com/

    • 58 min
    Black Resistance to British Policing w/ Adam Elliott-Cooper

    Black Resistance to British Policing w/ Adam Elliott-Cooper

    Adam Elliott-Cooper discusses histories of Black resistance to British policing, specifically how figures such as Claudia Jones, Darcus Howe, and Stuart Hall have theorized and resisted Policing’s role in upholding British Imperialism, racial capitalism, and neoliberalism.

    Adam Elliott-Cooper is Lecturer in Public and Social Policy at Queen Mary and the author of Black Resistance to British Policing and co-author of Empire’s Endgame: Racism and the British State. Adam also sits on the board of The Monitoring Group, an anti-racist organization, challenging state racisms and racial violence.

    SUPPORT: www.buymeacoffee.com/redmedicine
    ICA EVENT: www.ica.art/nervous-systems
    Soundtrack by Mark Pilkington
    Twitter: @red_medicine__
    www.redmedicine.substack.com/

    • 1 hr 6 min
    Class Struggle in the Care Economy w/ Taj Ali and Gabriel Winant

    Class Struggle in the Care Economy w/ Taj Ali and Gabriel Winant

    Gabriel Winant and Taj Ali discuss the surge of labor organising that has taken place in British and American healthcare over the last few years.

    Gabriel Winant is an assistant professor of history at the University of Chicago and the author of The Next Shift: The Fall of Industry and the Rise of Health Care in Rust Belt America. His writing has been published in Dissent, n+1, Jacobin, The New York Review of Books.

    Taj Ali is the co-editor of Tribune Magazine and has been writing about trade unions and workers rights for a number of years. He has a forthcoming book about the history of political activism in the British South Asian Community.

    SUPPORT: www.buymeacoffee.com/redmedicine
    Soundtrack by Mark Pilkington
    Twitter: @red_medicine__
    www.redmedicine.substack.com/

    • 1 hr 29 min
    How the Police Became an Army w/ Julian Go

    How the Police Became an Army w/ Julian Go

    Julian Go explains the 200 year history of police militarization in Britain and the U.S. He highlights the relationships between race, moral panics, and criminalization before describing how these connections shed light on the struggles against colonialism, imperialism, and policing.

    Julian Go is Professor of Sociology and Faculty Affiliate of the Center for the Study of Race, Politics & Culture and the Committee on International Relations at the University of Chicago. He is the author of Postcolonial Thought and Social Theory (Oxford, 2016). He is the winner of Lewis A. Coser Award for Theoretical Agenda Setting in Sociology given by the American Sociological Association and former President of the Social Science History Association. His new book Policing Empires: Militarization, Race, and the Imperial Boomerang in Britain and the US is now available from Oxford University Press.

    SUPPORT: www.buymeacoffee.com/redmedicine
    Soundtrack by Mark Pilkington
    Twitter: @red_medicine__
    www.redmedicine.substack.com/

    • 1 hr 6 min

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