I was a guest on #FemFriday with Nomiki Konst on her YouTube show. My interview starts at 30:15.
My interview starts at 30:15
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I was a guest on #FemFriday with Nomiki Konst on her YouTube show. My interview starts at 30:15.
My interview starts at 30:15
This was a fun essay on political belonging, and reminded me of a conversation I had with a Bulgarian of Turkish ethnicity back in the late 1990s about the Bulgarian word for Comrade, Drugar. I wrote about this encounter for an essay in my 2011 book, Lost in Transition: Everyday Life After Communism.
Finally, the semester is over and I have some time to catch up on my reading. I literally have 17 books on my nightstand (or on the floor near it) waiting to be read or reread. I started off with this 2020 reader from an art project done in Sweden in the 2017-2018 academic year. It’s an eclectic collection of essays and interviews reflecting on the importance and relevance of Kollontai and her work today.
Wirtschaftliche Selbständigkeit bringt Frauen besseren Sex, belegt die amerikanische Sozialwissenschaftlerin Kristen Ghodsee im Gespräch im Bruno Kreisky Forum. Ausgangspunkt ist eine schon seit langem bekannte Umfrage aus früheren Zeiten, wonach Frauen in der versunkenen DDR sich viel zufriedener über ihr Sexualleben geäußert haben als Frauen im kapitalistischen Westen.
Die Onlineveranstaltung am 12. Mai 2021 mit Kristen Ghodsee, moderiert von Tessa Szyszkowitz, ist in englischer Sprache.
I like both Italy and France but for different reasons and would be happy to see either of them win. But Barbara Previ is an amazing singer and I like her song more because of those old school Edith Piaf vibes. Still the Italians are crushing it in the energy department.
I’m crossing my fingers that Americans will be allowed to travel to Europe again by the fall so I can actually attend this amazing event in person. A festival of solidarity on Zoom just won’t do…
This is the final proof of the front and back of the book!
Just rewatched Deja Q. I love John de Lancie so much.
Q to Data in “Deja Q” (Season 3, Ep. 18)
Breathtaking beauty at the Chanticleer Garden
Sometimes I wonder if Daisy feels this way about me…
I’m so happy to announce that there will be a Japanese translation of Why Women Have Better Sex Under Socialism: And Other Arguments for Economic Independence with Kawade Shobo Shinsha.
I’m in love with wisteria.
Although the first day of May was once the pagan festival of Beltane, today people around the globe celebrate it as their version of Labor Day. May 1st became associated with the labor movement because of a massive general strike that started in Chicago in 1886. On that day, over 300,000 workers (and around 40,000 in the city of Chicago alone) walked off of their jobs at 13,000 businesses across the United States. On May 2nd and 3rd, the work stoppage gained momentum and the strike grew to include almost 100,000 workers. The action was largely peaceful until the fateful Haymarket Affair of May 3, 1886, which ended in a massive wave of repression, a sensational show trial, and the hanging of four innocent men.
Read more from my latest newsletter here
As vaccination programmes offer the prospect of a return to physical teaching, what aspects of their pre-pandemic life will academics most heartily re-embrace (or at least touch elbows with)? And are there aspects of locked-down life that they will miss? Our six contributors offer a range of perspectives
Kristen Ghodsee
Getting back to the stacks
When it’s finally safe to return to campus, I will dive headlong into the east wing of the fourth floor of the Van Pelt-Dietrich Library.
According to the Library of Congress classification system, the H section contains most of the social science books relevant to my research, and it is between the rolling stacks that I will lose myself in something I like to call shelf research.
In those halcyon days before the advent of digital databases, I remember digging through the musty drawers of ancient card catalogues to find a text related to my subject matter. With the call number scratched out in pencil on a scrap of paper, I would hunt down the book. Then I would sit on the floor and take down about 10 books to the left and 10 books to the right of the one I’d searched for. Because librarians have arranged the books by subject matter, I usually find amazing sources that I would not have found by searching remotely through an electronic catalogue. Continue reading
It’s so hard to resist a Bassett hound when she gives you these sad eyes.
…but I don’t plan on keeping this bottle around for very long. Today, I’m celebrating the 34th anniversary of my 17th birthday (because I am divisible by 17 for only the 3rd time in my life so far).
Whenever I get my mat out, she wants to hog it for herself!
This is a photo of my 93-year-old grandmother from last week. She had not cut her hair since the pandemic began. I have never in my entire life seen her with hair this long. She was born in Puerto Rico in 1927 and came to New York after WWII to work as a seamstress. Although she only had a third-grade education, she was a member of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union for many years and a lifelong Democrat. When my parents divorced in the early 1980s, my grandmother moved in with us and I was very close with her as a teenager. I haven’t seen her in almost two years because of the pandemic, but I’m hoping to rectify that soon.
I had blast with Jen Pan and Ariella Thornhill on the Jacobin Show last night. Lots of ground covered, but I felt like we could have spoken for five more hours.