Platypus at the Left Forum 2010 (March 19-21)

March 7th, 2010

Dear New Yorkers,

Please join us on the weekend of March 19th at the 2010 Left Forum. Platypus members from Toronto, Chicago, Boston along with New York City members will be there both presenting and chairing these panels.  Below are a list of Platypus organized panels along with their respective line-ups and time slots.


Session 3: SATURDAY, 3:00 PM – 5:00 PM
The American Left and the “Black Question”: From Politics to Protest to the Post-Political
Benjamin Blumberg (Chair) – Platypus Affiliated Society
Tim Barker – Columbia University Student
Pamela Nogales – Platypus Affiliated Society
Christopher Cutrone – Platypus Affiliated Society
Session 4: SATURDAY, 5:00 PM – 7:00 PM
Politics of the Contemporary American Student Left
Pam Nogales (Chair) – Platypus Affiliated Society
Ashley Weger – Platypus Affiliated Society (Depaul Chapter Head)
Hannah Rappleye – New School alumnus, former Senior Editor of the NS Free Press
Easton Smith – Sarah Lawrence student, Unite Here organizer

Session 4: SATURDAY, 5:00 PM – 7:00 PM
Nationalism, Anti-Imperialism and International Solidarity Today
Jeremy Cohan (Chair) - Platypus Affiliated Society (New York University chapter)
Ryan Hardy- Platypus Affiliated Society
Spencer Leonard Platypus- Affiliated Society
TBA (Writer for Revolution Newspaper)
Peter Hudis (U.S. Marxist-Humanists)

SESSION 5: SUNDAY, 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM
Marxism and Anarchism: The Relevance of Radical Traditions Today
Blair Taylor (Chair) -
Ian Morrison – Platypus Affiliated Society
Annie Day – Revolutionary Communist Party (RCP)
Peter Staudenmaier – Cornell University

SESSION 5: SUNDAY, 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM
The Left and Prospects for Democracy in the Middle East: Iraq
Laura Lee Schmidt (Chair) – Platypus Affiliated Society; History, Theory and Criticism of Art and Architecture, MIT
Issam Shukri – Worker-communist Party of Iran (WPI)
Kanan Makiya – Brandeis University
Christopher Cutrone – Platypus Affiliated Society; University of Chicago
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SESSION 6: SUNDAY, 12:00 – 2:00 PM
The Green Movement and the Left: Prospects for Democracy in Iran
Laura Lee Schmidt (Chair) – Platypus Affiliated Society; History, Theory, and Criticism of Art and Architecture, MIT
Siyaves Azeri – Worker-Communist Party of Iran
Hamid Dabashi – Columbia University
Christopher Cutrone – Platypus Affiliated Society; University of Chicago
Saeed Rahnema – York University

SESSION 7: SUNDAY, 3:00 – 5:00 PM
Between the Old and New Left: An American Post-war Balance Sheet
Ian Morrison (Chair) – Platypus Affiliated Society
Benjamin Blumberg – Platypus Affiliated Society
Chris Mansour – Parsons The New School For Design

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Platypus Reading List on Iran

February 18th, 2010

Teach-in: The Failure of the Islamic Revolution

February 15th, 2010

Join Platypus members this Wednesday, February 17th at 7:30pm for a teach-in on the Iranian Revolution and a discussion on the current situation in Iran led by Platypus Review editor Pam C. Nogales C.

This event will be held at the New School, 80 Fifth Avenue, Rm. 802

Undoubtedly, the Left today should demand the overthrow of theocratic regimes; the regime of the Islamic Republic of Iran is no exception. However, how the regime is overthrown, who participates in this act and how they understand their political practice, has irreversible effects. In 1977-79, the international Left overlooked this consideration by uncritically supporting those seeking to overthrow the Shah. In so doing, the Left helped a right-wing popular movement establish the theocratic dictatorial government the protesters fight against today. How are we as leftists to make sense of this political failure so as to help rebuild an emancipatory Left today? How do the current protests challenge the Islamic Republic? What are the prospects for overthrowing the Iranian regime and what would take its place?

1. Against the status quo: An interview with Iranian trade-unionist Homayoun Pourzad

2. The failure of the Islamic revolution: The nature of the present crisis in Iran

3. 30 Years of the Islamic Revolution Iran: An interview with Ervand Abrahamian

4. Review: Iran “Insights into its Religion Politics and Power”

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Screenings: The Politics of Black History

February 6th, 2010

Two evenings of screenings and discussion on the legacy of black politics, its buried history, unmet challenges, and lingering problems for the Left.

Finally Got the News (1970): 7:00pm Thursday, February 11 Lang Cafe 65 W. 11th Street

Brother Outsider: The Life of Bayard Rustin (2003): 7:00pm Thursday, February 25 Room 1009, East 16th street

lightbox_BrotherOutsider1

Recommended readings from the Platypus Review,

1. An unmet challenge: Race and the Left in America

2. Book review: Jeffrey B. Perry, Hubert Harrison: The Voice of Harlem Radicalism, 1882-1918

This event is co-organized with our friends at Union Docs,

The mission of Union Docs is to present a broad range of innovative and thought-provoking non-fiction projects to the general public, while also cultivating specialized opportunities for learning, critical discourse, and creative collaboration for emerging media-makers, theorists, and curators.
http://www.uniondocs.org/

Thanks Union Docs!

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Platypus Review #19

January 18th, 2010

Film Screening: The Cradle Will Rock

December 9th, 2009

The Platypus New York Chapter presents:

The Cradle Will Rock (1999), a film screening and discussion

bill_murray_cradle_will_rock_001

Friday, December 11th, 6:00 pm-9:00 pm

The New School, 66 W. 12th St., rm. 404.

There will be a short discussion following the film. If you wish to attend and are not a student at the New School, please contact Chris Mansour @ chris.d.mansour@gmail.com to get your name on the security list.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0150216/

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Screening: Monday, November 23, 7:30 pm @ The Brecht Forum

November 19th, 2009

Red Channels and the Platypus Affiliated Society present:

The Poverty of Student Life, a film screening and discussion

SFimg

Monday, November 23, 7:30 pm – 10:30 pm @ The Brecht Forum, 451 West Street

San Francisco State: On Strike – Newsreel, 1969, 25 minutes
Community Control - Newsreel, 1969, 50 minutes
TOTAL RUNNING TIME: 75 minutes | Digital Projection

Discussion with:

Pam C. Nogales C. of the Platypus Affiliated Society

Luz Schreiber of the Committee in Defense of the Children’s Learning Center at Hunter College, and Ollin Imagination

Jitu Weusi – teacher, principal, member of the African American Teachers Association, co-founder of The East (1969-1985)

[more TBA]


*  *  *

Platypus Review articles on student politics:

1. Politics of the contemporary student Left

2.  Violence at the RNC

3. The New School occupation and the direction of student politics: an interview with Atlee McFellin

4. Five questions to the student Left

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Platypus Reading Group: week 11 [Saturday, 1:00pm]

November 18th, 2009
Please join us for the eleventh meeting of the Platypus Reading group. We will begin with the problem of our contemporary political moment, the absence of the Left, and will continue to investigate the history of the Left over the course of the upcoming academic year in light of this problem: What has the Left been, and what could it yet become? Meetings will be held every Saturday, from 1-4pm, at the New School. All are welcome.

WEEK 11: Saturday, November 21, 2009 @ 1:00pm

LOCATION: The New School 6 E. 16th St. rm 1008 New York, New York

“The realm of freedom is neither the voluntary submission to necessity, understanding its ‘laws’ in order to regulate it, nor its tempted voluntaristic subjugation. It is the possibility made available by the mass recognition beyond a given historical point of the temporalilty, the no-longer-necessity, of historical necessity.” (Postone)

• Martin Nicolaus, “The Unknown Marx” (1968)
• Postone, “Necessity, Labor, and Time” (1978)

Find the entire year’s syllabus here.

The Platypus Affiliated Society organizes reading groups, public fora, research, and journalism focused on problems and tasks inherited from the “Old” (1920s-30s), “New” (1960s-70s) and post-political (1980s-90s) Left, for the possibilities of emancipatory politics today.

http://platypus1917.org/

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November 18th, 2009

The Decline of the Left in the 20th Century :

Toward a Theory of Historical Regression

Platypus Review Special Edition (issue 17: November, 2009)

Platypus banner at anti-war demonstration, Chicago, March 19, 2008

Based on a panel discussion held by Platypus at Pace University last year, The Platypus Review traces in this special issue the slow death of the Left in our time, precisely as a means of identifying the conditions necessary for its reconstitution. Centered around four crucial years—2001, 1968, 1933, and 1917—The Decline of the Left in the 20th Century is an important step in Platypus’s attempt to advance a coherent perspective on the Left’s incoherences, past and present.

Introduction by Benjamin Blumberg
The origin of and impetus for Platypus, in summary.

2001 by Spencer A. Leonard
A pointed argument against the prevalence of romantic Third Worldism, the lack of internationalism, and the actionist character of protest culture in today’s “Left.”

1968 by Atiya Khan
The politically restless and disoriented 1960s analyzed, with respect to the diremption of theory and practice, through the lens of the Marcuse–Adorno correspondence.

1933 by Richard Rubin
An elegiac rumination on the lives of Leon Trotsky and Walter Benjamin, who provide the basis for a discussion of what the 1930s have come to mean for Left politics today.

1917 by Chris Cutrone
Examines the work of Georg Lukàcs and Karl Korsch, whose intellectual trajectories provide a key to understanding the “brilliant failure” of 1917, without taking its failure for granted.

* * *

Platypus is a project for the self-criticism, self-education, and, ultimately, the practical reconstitution of a Marxian Left. We hope to reinvigorate a conversation on the Left that has long since fallen into senility or silence, in order to help found anew an emancipatory political practice that is presently absent. What has the Left been, and what can it yet become? Platypus exists because the answer to such a question, even its basic formulation, has long ceased to be self-evident.
platypus1917.org

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Trotsky’s speech in Copenhagen (Denmark)

November 12th, 2009

New York has got some explaining to do…

[...Europe in general has ceased to be the center of the world. It is foolish to hope that Europe as it is will again occupy that position. The present terrific crisis, in spite of its devastating effects on the United States, will change the relation of forces still farther, not in favor of Europe, but in favor of the United States and the colonial countries. To see far it is best to stand on the roof of a skyscraper. The most suitable point for observing the world panorama in every respect, I consider to be New York.]

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Public Forum in NYC: September 13th, 2009

September 9th, 2009

The Platypus Affiliated Society presents:

30 Years of the Islamic Revolution in Iran

The Tragedy of the Left

6:00pm Sunday, September 13, 2009

at The Brecht Forum 451 West St New York, NY

bannerIran

A panel discussion with:

Ervand Abrahamian Professor of History at Baruch College, CUNY and author of Iran: Between Two Revolutions, 1982

Siyaves Azeri Head of the Committee of International Relations of the Worker-Communist Party of Iran

Hamid Dabashi Professor of Iranian Studies and Comparative Literature at Columbia University and the author of Iran: A People Interrupted, 2007

Moderated by Pam C. Nogales C. (Platypus)

By tailing after events, the Left betrays its revolutionary history. The Iranian election protests of the last three months have been no exception. Leftists have hailed the amorphous social upheaval in the streets of Tehran as a step towards the transformation and progressive “evolution” of Iranian society. Yet, however optimistic this position may sound, celebration without understanding only obfuscates our political situation. Undoubtedly, the Left today should demand the overthrow of theocratic regimes. But here is the importance of ideology: how the regime is overthrown — who participates in this act and how they understand their political practice — has real effects. In 1977-79, the international Left overlooked this problem by uncritically supporting those seeking to overthrow the Shah. In so doing, the Left helped a right-wing popular movement establish the theocratic dictatorial government the protesters fight against today. How are we as leftists to make sense of this political failure so as to help rebuild an emancipatory Left today? In the spirit of renewal, Platypus asserts that if the Left is to change the world, it must first transform itself!

Past events: http://platypus1917.org/category/multimedia/

Recommended Platypus Review articles:

1. 30 Years of the Islamic Revolution: An Interview with Ervand Abrahamian

2. The Failure of the Islamic Revolution: The nature of the present crisis in Iran

IMG caption:  A Mujahidin-i-khalq demonstration in Tehran during the revolution. The figure on the left is Dr. Ali Shari’ati

Questions for the panelists

Question 1:

Who were the major political players in the Iranian Revolution—individuals, organizations, classes? What role did the Left in Iran play in preparing, carrying through, and influencing the outcome of the Revolution? How, if at all, did international Leftist elements influence the course of events?

Question 2:

How do you see the Iranian Revolution in relation to the history of modern revolutions marked by, among others, 1789, 1848, 1917?

Question 3:

Why is it that, historically, Leftists have understood secular movements as offering greater possibilities for the attainment of human freedom than those guided by religious commitment?

Question 4:

Some believe that Iranians suffer from an inherent traditional disposition that intractably blocks the influence and efficacy of a secular Marxist politics — a politics ultimately too “Western” to have any purchase in a place like Iran. How does this rather narrow particularistic argument impede Leftists today from learning from past political failures on the Left? How do we explain the failure of a Marxist politics to capture the political imagination of Iranians via a retrospective look at the trajectory of the Left—before, during, and after the Iranian Revolution? How do we understand the political disenchantment in Iran as part of our time, i.e., as modern, and not as the stubborn remnants of “tradition”?

Question 5:

One of the fundamental axes around which oppositional politics has orbited over the course of the twentieth century is imperialism and its relation to capitalism. Therefore an understanding of how imperialism and capitalism are related—and consequently, how to oppose one, the other, or both—has proved central in the self-understanding of political actors and the choices they and their organizations have made. At issue here is how a Left schooled by a generation that may be loosely called “third wordlist”—with an emphasis on the extortive role of the First to the Third World, the death of revolutionary potential in the First (and Second) World, and the importance of resistance to the major capitalist hegemons—understood itself and thus acted based on these understandings. Overall, how did understandings of capitalism impact political decisions and alliances both within revolutionary Iran and in the global Left?

How did Leftists in Iran understand the relationship of Iran to modern capitalism? What were the essential relationships that defined capitalism in their understanding—between bourgeoisie and proletariat? Between center and periphery? How was the anti-imperialism of Khomeini the same or different than the anti-imperialism of Shari’ati and other Leftists—and how did they perceive their interrelations?

Question 6:

How was “the West” understood by Iranian revolutionaries? Was there any revolutionary potential invested in the “developed” capitalist nations? Was the proletariat of the West still a potentially revolutionary force? How did Iranian leftists understand the internal dynamics of Western societies vis a vis their own political situation?

Question 7:

What was the range of responses to the Iranian Revolution by the International Left? How was Iranian society understood? Was someone like Michel Foucault, in his fascination with the religious elements of the Revolution and his look towards the Revolution as providing a new and different model of revolutionary (post-) politics, overcoming the revolutionary heritage of 1789, typical or an outlier? How did these understandings affect the role the international Left would play over the course of the Iranian Revolution?

Question 8:

What were the explicit goals of the Iranian Revolution? Were they met? Could they have been met? Why did the Iranian Revolution end with an “Islamic Republic?” What is an “Islamic Republic” and how does it relate to or deviate from the goals of the Revolution as a whole?

Can we imagine a counterfactual case where the Iranian Revolution did not end as it did? What would have had to have been different in 1977-1979 for another, more progressive, outcome to have occurred? How far back historically can we trace the conditions that made for the Left’s failures in the Revolution? What political decisions might have been made in the Revolution itself that could have shaped differently the course of events?

Question 9

Do you think that the idea and the reality of the Islamic Republic should be challenged? Why are Leftists today not calling for the overthrow of the Islamic Republic?

What are the ideas that have captured the political imaginations of the Tehran protestors today? Are they similar or different to the ones that inspired the revolutionaries of 1977-1979? How does the recrudescence of these ideas affect our understanding of the protests today? What does it say about the protesters self-understanding when they rally under the slogan, “Khomeini, where are you? Mousavi is alone!”?

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Film screening: Examined Life [ October 3rd, 7:30pm @ Union Docs ]

October 1st, 2009

Saturday, October 3 – 7:30pm @ Union Docs [ 322 Union Ave, Brooklyn NY ]

Platypus NY Chapter head, Chris Mansour, will be introducing the film. Discussion with Filmmaker and Stephen Duncombe to follow the screening.

In EXAMINED LIFE (2008, 87 minutes, Canada, DVD), filmmaker Astra Taylor accompanies some of today’s most influential thinkers on a series of unique excursions through places and spaces that hold particular resonance for them and their ideas.

This event is presented in association with the Platypus Affiliated Society, New York chapter. Platypus organizes reading groups, public fora, research and journalism focused on problems and tasks inherited from the “Old” (1920s-30s), “New” (1960s-70s) and post-political (1980s-90s) Left for the possibilities of emancipatory politics today.

http://www.uniondocs.org/examined-life-with-astra-taylor/

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Hot off the press: Platypus Review #16

October 10th, 2009

Recall how Red Chicago was, a book review of Randi Storch’s new history. Read about (and listen to) drone music. Smell your way to Rosa Luxemburg’s corpse and the decaying left in Germany. Learn about Unite Here’s recent civil disobedience action in downtown Chicago. And check out a review of a new take on Adorno’s philosophy and intellectual life.

Contributors to this issue’s stories: Ashley Weger, Bret Schneider, Jerzy Sobotta, Laurie Rojas, and Haseeb Ahmed

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NY Platypus chapter has its own Facebook group

October 26th, 2009

woodyNYPAS

Because Chicago Platypus has got nuthin’ on us, and because the East coast is obviously so much better than the Mid-West! Here is our new Facebook group for NYC. New York, add us, love us, because we love NYC!

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Platypus Reading Group: Saturday, October 31, 1– 4pm

October 30th, 2009

Please join us for the eighth meeting of the Platypus Reading group. We will begin with the problem of our contemporary political moment, the absence of the Left, and will continue to investigate the history of the Left over the course of the upcoming academic year in light of this problem: What has the Left been, and what could it yet become? Meetings will be held every Saturday, from 1-4pm, at the New School. All are welcome.

WEEK 8: Saturday, October 31, 2009 at 1:00pm

• Max Shachtman, Race and Revolution (AKA Communism and the Negro, 1933

LOCATION: The New School, 6 E. 16th St. rm 1008, New York, New York

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