Seen on twitter
@libcomorg
libcom.org
@paulmasonnews what's the new book about? Any chance we can get a review copy?9 Sep via web
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paulmasonnews Paul Mason
@
@libcomorg its about you lot!
9 Sep-----
libcomorg libcom.org
@
@paulmasonnews Look forward to reading it! We will review it if you get your publishers to send us a copy! #lookingforafreebie
9 Sep
Should be interesting.
Here's a talk he gave earlier in the year that might give an idea of the line of argument.
[youtube]XTNcySHaCm8[/youtube]
Any idea what's the books
Any idea what's the books called or when it will be published?
No, that snippet on twitter
No, that snippet on twitter is all I've seen. I was hoping someone else would come up with more information.
Whatever it is on its
Whatever it is on its finished. Also form twitter: "Voted 13th in totalpolitics blogging poll - book finished so will be blogging more..."
Also from twitter: 'early
Also from twitter: 'early 2012 "why its kicking off " book, mixture of bleak and hopeful'
Theft wrote: Any idea what's
Theft
'Why It's Kicking Off Everywhere is published by Verso in January'
http://www.versobooks.com/books/1075-why-its-kicking-off-everywhere
I heard this book was ghost
I heard this book was ghost written by Tommy Ascaso ;)
So the book is now out and
So the book is now out and the book about it is on the way:
http://www.minorcompositions.info/?page_id=345
Guardian video Paul Mason:
Guardian video
Paul Mason: 'These revolts have ended the period of capitalist realism'
Reviews at
http://paulmason.typepad.com/paul_mason_writer_broadca/
A more critical review from
A more critical review from shift magazine
http://shiftmag.co.uk/?p=523
Lecture at LSE on 30 January,
Lecture at LSE on 30 January, also available as a podcast
[youtube]mztFlAQSccA[/youtube]
Few chapters in, decent so
Few chapters in, decent so far and I like his writing. Early impressions are I'm a bit put-off by the uncritical way he engages with the stuff in Egypt. Maybe it gets better, but early on a year ago, there were lots of people saying how handing over to a military rule rather than Mubarak was no real revolution and that's borne out by recent interviews with participants a year on:
"I came on 25th last year, I've been here throughout the difficult times in the past year, and I'm here again because things haven't improved. In fact they got worse," declared Shaimaa Zain, dressed in tight jeans and sunglasses.
"There is a conspiracy between the extremists and the military council."
I guess being there and interviewing people at the time might have given a rose-tinted view.
Choccy wrote: Early
Choccy
I might need to look back at that chapter, but generally I took his approach as being to try to describe what the protest movements and so on actually are rather than what he, or anyone else, thinks they ought to be. He does seem to skate over some of the events pretty quickly though.
Anyway things seem to be getting interesting again in Egypt - see the response to the Port Said stadium disaster for example, which has developed into a call for a general strike:
[youtube]gEJA3tGwkp4[/youtube]
The coverage he did of the
The coverage he did of the factory occupation and hospital self-management stuff was cool though so I'm not having a go as such.
New Scientist interview: 'the
New Scientist interview: 'the revolution will be tweeted'
I read it, and think it
I read it, and think it succeeds on its own terms -- as decent journalism. This said, I think "Meltdown" is still his best book, and I found the 'reportage' parts of "Why....." (especially the later chapters on the USA & the slums in Manila) a bit painful. Like those "Sunrise over the slums, and has already been working for 2 hours" things you get in the Guardian magazine.
I agree Meltdown is his best
I agree Meltdown is his best book, and this doesn't change that. I think it's a bit over excited about the most recent wave of uprisings, but a decent overview none the less, and an interesting companion piece to "Live Working..."
Just downloaded his novel, which Iooks quite funny, Wayne crossed with Wu Ming.
(No subject)
[youtube]7WsmWEt0RK0[/youtube]
Talk given to World Affairs
Talk given to World Affairs Council of Northern California
http://wacsf.vportal.net/?fileid=6420
Here's a review of Why It's
Here's a review of [em]Why It's Kicking off Everywhere: The New Global Revolutions[/em]:
must admit yet to read the
must admit yet to read the book, but when to an interesting talk by Paul Mason (about the book and related ideas) at the Bath Literature Festival :)
he had some interesting analysis of the crisis and of organisation and opposition to austerity as well, he also spoke about the ideals of capitalism having failed many people (the american dream no longer exists kinda line), which was interesting, I think he is good, but is also worth being aware of the fact that he is a Keynsian rather than an Anarchist/Socialist.
I've published a very long
I've published a very long review and discussion of 'Why its kicking off everywhere' at http://anarchism.pageabode.com/andrewnflood/kicking-off-everywhere-paul-mason-review
IMHO its well worth reading and has a lot of useful insights even if politically there are some pretty big problems. I'm actually finding his politics quite hard to get my head around as they seem quite contradictory
Was Paul Mason not a member
Was Paul Mason not a member of Workers Power?
I was put off seeking out his writing by the association because I found Workers Power to be the most unreadable of all Leninist papers- I have heard him doing the interview circuit promoting this book and I am trying to get hold of a copy- it sounded interesting.
He was but I think that was
He was but I think that was some time ago. Haven't read any of his stuff but I'm not surprised to see people saying the new book is a bit at odds with itself. When I saw him at the bookfair doing a talk a couple of years back, he basically advocated that left wing parties take power because if they don't, right or far right parties will.
Yea he was in Workers Power
Yea he was in Workers Power in the early 2000's. See here.
I wouldn't let his one time
I wouldn't let his one time membership of Workers Power put you off, you have to look pretty hard to find any traces of it in his writings today. There are a couple of echos which I mention but the political problems mostly come from other sources.
He was in Workers Power from
He was in Workers Power from the 80's through to the late 90's pretty sure he had left by 2000, though not sure as I left the same group just after a couple of ex-AWG members joined in the early 90's.
Quote: I wouldn't let his one
I was put off on stylistic grounds- I have a learning disability and remember trying to read a copy of Workers Power in order to discuss it with a friend- it was such turgid prose and terrible layout and I have to read and re-read things in order to absorb the content; my eyes bled!
Ah well then no worries, its
Ah well then no worries, its the most readable theory book I've ever read by a very long way indeed
Occupied Times interview with
Occupied Times interview with Paul Mason
http://theoccupiedtimes.co.uk/?p=3392
Mason is just another
Mason is just another capitalist hack who serves up just what they want but in 'radicalish' guise. I was astonished that he reported just after the demo last spring in London that people in the black bloc had been talking to him: why would anyone do this? His reporting on Greece at the time of the mass assemblies etc did not mention this at all. Yes he produces interesting books about the conditions of the working class etc but he is still a capitalist hack, and all the more dangerous for his radicalism.
I didn't read all the
I didn't read all the comments - when is it going to be published? I did check out the video, good stuff.
mariajones wrote: when is it
mariajones
It came out a few weeks ago.
The graduates of 2012 will
The graduates of 2012 will survive only in the cracks of our economy
Six quick notes on Paul
Six quick notes on Paul Mason’s piece on the ‘Graduate Without A Future’
There was a Novara discussion
There was a Novara discussion today on Paul Mason's piece and The Guardian are doing a series on 'the graduate without a future', which includes the following article by Nina Power:
Absurd student debt has ended mass inclusion – our future is at risk
I wasn't that sure what to
I wasn't that sure what to make of the chapter on networks in the book. Paul Mason has just done an interview with Manuel Castells which I suppose is relevant to this and doesn't really justify a new thread. Any thoughts on it?
[quote=Paul Mason]
When most of us were still struggling to work our analogue modems, in the mid-1990s, one man had worked out where the internet was going.
Manuel Castells, one of the world's most cited sociologists, proclaimed the dawn of the "network society".
In pioneering quantitative research, he discovered that internet use and "projects of personal autonomy" fed off each other: that the internet, in other words, was changing our social attitudes and even our very selves.
For Radio 4's Analysis, on Monday night at 8.30pm, I quiz Professor Castells about his new book Aftermath - which looks at how the current financial crisis has produced networked protest movements, and even new "non-capitalist" forms of economic behaviour (the programme was recorded with a live audience at the London School of Economics last week)…[/quote]
Listen to the interview here
I caught that talk a couple
I caught that talk a couple of days ago, makes for an interesting listen. I think it raised some interesting points about how identity can be influenced by an increasingly networked way of life. I may go ahead and get Castells book once I've got a bit of book money floating around. I'd be interested to hear from anyone that has read it already.
Indigo, save your money and
Indigo, save your money and get a shitload of books by Castells for free here: http://libgen.info/search.php?search_type=magic&search_text=manuel+castells&submit=Поиск (just click on a title and then click "Get!").
Thanks jura, thats my day off
Thanks jura, thats my day off sorted! :O
Sorry about that
Sorry about that ;)
Novara: Series 2, Episode 23
Novara: Series 2, Episode 23 - 'Why It's Still Kicking Off Everywhere'
Paul Mason on the protests in
Paul Mason on the protests in Turkey, Brazil and Bulgaria:
Shared symbolism of global youth unrest
Paul Mason calling himself an
Paul Mason calling himself an anarcho-syndicalist?
[quote=Nick Cohen]
The success of Channel 4 News in replacing Newsnight as the preeminent current affairs programme on British television is one of those events that fascinates journalists but leaves the public cold...
...as things stand, Newsnight's best journalists are walking out of its understaffed newsroom. The programme is glum and timid, racked by scandal and self-doubt...
Paul Mason, Newsnight's economics editor, is a furrow-browed theorist from the Marxisant Left...
In a statement, Mason said he was leaving because he wanted the freedom to write books without submitting them to the BBC's censors...
[/quote]
BBC Radio 4 Great Lives: Paul
BBC Radio 4 Great Lives: Paul Mason on Louise Michel
He can only join SF if he's
He can only join SF if he's willing to organise Channel 4.
(Or write for Direct Action.)
wojtek wrote: BBC Radio 4
wojtek
Good program that. A bit surprised by his choice.
I'd have thought he was much
I'd have thought he was much closer to a modern day De Leonist than any sort of anarchist as he is pretty supportive of the party form and electoralism as part of an overall strategy - or at least that's how I have read him.
Some people maybe interested
Some people maybe interested in this response from the Communist Workers' Organisation to Paul Mason's new book.
Post-capitalism via the Internet (According to Paul Mason) – Dream or Reality?