Category Archives: BRHG

1-2: Three Minutes to Midnight: The Women’s Anti-Nuclear Protest at Greenham Common

Bristol Anarchist Bookfair.

Elaine Titcombe (UWE)

Radical History Zone.

20th of April.

1pm-2pm

In 1984 the doomsday clock reached three minutes to midnight. This was the closest recorded time to global destruction defined (at that time) as imminence to nuclear war, since 1953. This crisis arose as a result of an escalation of militarism between the East and West Superpowers, following the NATO decision in 1979 to modernise their theatre of nuclear weapons in response to the perceived superiority of the USSR. This modernisation consisted of the deployment of 572 new American missiles in Europe. From 1983, 106 Ground Launched Cruise Missiles were positioned in Britain, with the majority being held at the Greenham Common RAF military base in Berkshire.

In 1981, a group of 36 women calling themselves, ‘Women for Life on Earth: Women’s Action for Disarmament,’ organised a March from South Wales to the base at Greenham Common to protest against the positioning there of the American controlled nuclear Cruise missiles. A lack of media interest and a dismissive response by the Conservative Government to their demand for a public debate on the issue, gave rise to the formation of a spontaneous peace camp. Slowly the protest began to attract attention and by early 1982 it had evolved into several (distinct) women-only camps around the military base. Several women committed themselves to live and work full time at the camps giving up their everyday home comforts, and thousands more supporters arrived en masse at the base for publicised protest days when it was reported that up to 50,000 people took part.

As time went on, the women living at the camps developed a particularly feminist stance against the militaristic nature of the State, with non-violent direct action at the core of their work. They attempted to construct and live in a ‘new’ female led society that rejected hierarchical structures of command in direct opposition to ‘normal’ patriarchal / militaristic society rules. Supporting women who did not live at the camps were encouraged to “Carry Greenham Home” and spread word of the protest and feminist argument in their local communities. With reference to events staged in various locations, including Bristol and Bath, this paper will describe the innovative ways that women embraced this call for support. It will draw upon the words of the participants as they have recalled their actions, as well as the publicity material created by them and the contemporary coverage of the events by the local media and other groups.

As the camps persisted the Authorities became increasingly intolerant of the women’s protest and began to react. Women were increasingly arrested, imprisoned, evicted and man-handled as they took part in disruptive actions in order to prevent normal operations at the base. The media was quick to brand the women as undesirables and over time it became increasingly difficult to persuade new women to the cause. Beyond the mid ‘80s the protest began to wane in popularity, but work continued at the camps well beyond the removal of the nuclear weapons following the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty (INF) of 1987, with the last residents leaving the site in September 2000.

In addition to exploring the story of the Greenham Women’s protest using a variety of media, this event allows the opportunity to consider its legacy upon radical movements and in particular for feminism.

 

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3-4: Poor Man’s Heaven: The Land of Cokaygne and Other Utopian Visions

Bristol Anarchist Bookfair.

Radical History Zone.

Omasius Gorgut (Past Tense)

20th of April.

3pm-4pm

We’ll eat all we please from ham and egg trees
that grow by a lake full of beer?
The landlord well take and tie to a stake
and we won’t have to work like a slave…”

In the face of a life defined by exploitation and suffering, the poor of the Middle Ages dreamed up a fantastical land where their sufferings were reversed; where people lived in idleness and plenty and the rich were barred.

“Those who sleep the longest earn the most here.”

This myth of a free earthly paradise emerged in a popular song, The Land of Cokaygne, in which rivers ran with wine and milk, the houses were made of pasties and tarts, and animals ran around cooked and ready to eat.

“Geese fly roasted on the spit,
Crying out, “Geese, all hot, all hot!”

From fourteenth century Europe to the twentieth century USA, this dream emerges in songs, poems, folk tales. But it wasn’t just a popular fantasy – the dream was linked to the culture & tensions of the times, and time and again rebels and heretics tried to turn dream into reality…

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Physical Resistance. A Hundred Years of Anti-Fascism.

Thursday the 31st of January.
7:00pm.

Price: Donation

Book Launch presented by Bristol Radical History Group.

Physical Resistance: A Hundred Years of Anti-Fascism

Large-scale confrontations, disruption of meetings, sabotage and street fighting have been part of the practice of anti-fascism from the early twentieth century until the twenty-first. Rarely endorsed by any political party, the use of collective bodily strength remains a strategy of activists working in alliances and coalitions against fascism. In Physical Resistance famous battles against fascists, from the Olympia arena, Earls Court in 1934 and Cable Street in 1936 to Southall in 1978 and Bradford 2010, are told through the voices of participants. Anarchists, communists and socialists who belonged to a shifting series of anti-fascist organizations relate well-known events alongside many forgotten but significant episodes.

Studies of anti-fascism in Britain have tended to be either academic texts or partisan political histories. Physical Resistance is neither; it is an inclusive history, broader in scope than any other work so far. It covers the whole period of anti-fascist activism but importantly, it redefines political practice according to the act of participation rather than the adherence to precisely defined ideological standpoints and offers an alternative interpretation of political action, which includes physical resistance as part of an everyday pattern of opposition. This wider and longer historical perspective is pieced together through the everyday experiences of activists themselves.The importance of any book about anti-fascism depends upon how it is used. As well as the history of anti-fascism, our discussion will address the re-emergence of an anti-fascist movement over the last year.

For more on the book details see: http://www.zero-books.net/books/physical-resistance

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George Caffentzis: Resistance to Debt (BRHG)

Thursday 22nd November

Resistance to Debt is increasingly the way that class struggle is
being expressed today. But debt resistance is not new. In Ancient Rome
the battles between debtors and creditors were real ones, fought to
the finish. This kind of struggle has returned in the late 20th
century in many parts of the world though in a less bloody manner.
Caffentzis will discuss one of the largest debt resistors’
organization in history, the El Barzon (or The Yoke) movement in
Mexico in the 1990s. A number of common elements in these movements
will be discussed and their strengths and weaknesses will be
discussed. Finally, he will introduce the work of a debt resistors’
organization that is forming in the US arising out of the Occupy
movement in the US.

George Caffentzis is a philosopher of money and a participant in
Strike Debt who lives in NYC.

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Silvia Federici: Revolution at Point Zero (BRHG)

Wednesday 14th November 7:00pm

Public Lecture by Silvia Federici and launch of her new book: Revolution at Point Zero: Housework, Reproduction, and Feminist Struggle (PM Press, 2012)

Written between 1974 and the present, Revolution at Point Zero collects forty years of research and theorizing on the nature of housework, social reproduction, and women’s struggles on this terrain—to escape it, to better its conditions, to reconstruct it in ways that provide an alternative to capitalist relations. Indeed, as Federici reveals, behind the capitalist organization of work and the contradictions inherent in “alienated labour” is an explosive ground zero for revolutionary practice upon which are decided the daily realities of our collective reproduction. Beginning with Federici’s organizational work in the Wages for Housework movement, the essays collected here unravel the power and politics of wide but related issues including the international restructuring of reproductive work and its effects on the sexual division of labour, the globalization of care work and sex work, the crisis of elder care, the development of affective labour, and the politics of the commons.

About Silvia:

Silvia Federici is a feminist writer, teacher, and militant. In 1972, she was co-founder of the International Feminist Collective, which launched the Wages for Housework campaign internationally. With other members of Wages for Housework, like Mariarosa Dalla Costa and Selma James, and with feminist authors like Maria Mies and Vandana Shiva, Federici has been instrumental in developing the concept of “reproduction” as a key to class relations of exploitation and domination in local and global contexts, and as central to forms of autonomy and the commons. She is the author of Caliban and the Witch: Women, the Body and Primitive Accumulation (Autonomedia, 2004)

In the 1990s, after a period of teaching and research in Nigeria, she was active in the anti-globalization movement and the U.S. anti-death penalty movement. She is one of the cofounders of the Committee for Academic Freedom in Africa, an organization dedicated to generating support for the struggles of students and teachers in Africa against the structural adjustment of African economies and education systems. From 1987 to 2005, she also taught international studies, women’s studies, and political philosophy courses at Hofstra University in Hempstead, NY.

Her decades of research and political organizing accompanies a long list of publications on philosophy and feminist theory, women’s history, education, culture, international politics, and more recently on the worldwide struggle against capitalist globalization and for a feminist reconstruction of the commons. Her steadfast commitment to these issues resounds in her focus on autonomy and her emphasis on the power of what she calls self-reproducing movements as a challenge to capitalism through the construction of new social relation.

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