Showing posts with label News from Nowhere. Show all posts
Showing posts with label News from Nowhere. Show all posts

Monday, July 8, 2019

Some Summer and subsequent Events

See also previous listings post

NEWS FROM NOWHERE CLUB
Saturday 13th July 2019
  Vi Gostling Memorial Lecture

                   Why private financing of public infrastructure must end and how we can do it

Speaker: Helen Mercer

 We all now know that no new PFI contracts will be signed, following general recognition that the experiment has been inefficient, costly and otherwise disastrous for the quality of our infrastructure and services. This talk focuses on what to do with the PFIs that are being left to run their course until the 2030s, or longer for many. 

The talk first demystifies financial wheeler-dealing by providing a clear and straightforward explanation of how private profit is spun off from public services, using examples of PFIs which affect people in North East London. Understanding those financial mechanisms has informed an idea currently gaining interest and agreement: that we can end the process entirely by nationalising the ‘Special Purpose Vehicles’, the financial companies which sign the contracts with public authorities. Helen is a retired lecturer in Economics and Economic History, and a member of People vs PFI.
                                 At the Epicentre, West Street E11 4LJ
7.30pm Buffet   8.00pm Talk and discussion
Free entry, donations welcomed / raffle
Enquiries 0208 555 5248  All welcome, no need to book
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News from Nowhere Meeting
Saturday 10th August
UPDATE from email:
"Our speaker from Ashiana cannot come after all, but instead we are privileged to have Dr Annie  Gray talking about
'Loneliness Amongst Seniors: Why It's Important and what to do about it'
... Usual time, usual place: 7.30 for 8 p.m. at Epicentre E11 4LJ."
========================

Bishopsgate Institute Peace Day, 19 July 1919

Saturday 20 July

  • Time:11:00 AM - 14:00 PM
  • Days of Week:Saturday
  • Course Code:AC19301
  • Subject:Arts and Culture
  • Level:SUITABLE FOR ALL
  • Tutor:Dr Michelle Johansen
  • Max students:16
  • Number of Sessions:1
  • Status:Available/A
  • Cost:£22.00 to £29.00
  • Concs. :£22
World War One did not officially end on 11 November 1918. Treaty negotiations at Versailles continued into the following year and it wasn’t until July 1919 that Britain celebrated formally with processions, pageants and street parties.

This session uses original historical sources to discover at first-hand what life was like in the aftermath of war for ordinary Londoners, among them demobilised soldiers, women office workers and conscientious objectors.

A Hands-on History course led by Dr Michelle Johansen.

For more information about this course and what you will learn, see the course outline.

Have a question? Send us an email or give us a call on: 020 7392 9200
==========================d
From New Anarchist Research Group

Saturday 27 July 14:00-16:00 at the MayDay Rooms* 

Paris, May 1968 - An Eyewitness Account
Peter Turner 

"In 1968 France was in melt down. There was rioting in the streets and everyone seemed to be out on strike. I was 25 years old and involved in camping at the gates of Porton Down biological warfare research station on the Salisbury Plains with CND. I thought that there might never be another revolution in Western Europe in my lifetime so if I wanted to see history being made I had better get over there a.s.a.p. Four days later I was in the Sorbonne. This account is a personal record of what one man saw and heard (and smelt) in Paris in May 1968. It is cobbled together from the pages of the diary I kept at the time, the photos I took and my memories. I worked as a translator in the students' Press Dept and I experienced the bullets and the barricades at first hand. As for interpreting what it all meant, I'll leave that to others."

Biography: 
"I have earned my living from teaching science, and from working as an entomologist, both in Europe and in the Caribbean, where I lived for 4 years. Most of my political activities have been in the NUT and in single-issue campaigns, particularly solidarity movements such as Anti Apartheid and Nicaragua Solidarity Campaign and the Palestine Solidarity Movement. I am a member of the Haringey Solidarity Group, and I support the Catholic Workers Movement, though without being Christian.
I write 2 blogs: petersgreentubewalks.wordpress.com which publishes details of footpaths in London's green belt, while assessing their suitability for disabled walkers, and zingcreed.wordpress.com which is a 'Christian-atheist' cum 'Christian -anarchist' blog with nearly 60,000 hits so far."

*MayDay Rooms 88 Fleet St, London EC4Y 1DH 
Our meetings are friendly and informal.  
Please note that we hold a collection to pay for the use of the room
 ==========================
NEW from AUTONOMY NOW: 

DOING MONEY DIFFERENTLY with HUGH BARNARD
Thursday 15th August 2019
Doors open 6.30pm for 7pm start
Venue: LARC (London Action Resource Centre)
62 Fieldgate Street
Whitechapel

London E1 1ES 
Entry is free, donations to LARC are appreciated.
Booking preferred but not essential.
"The international economic crisis of 2007-9 brought people in the UK within two hours from cashpoints running dry. The effects are still reverberating around the world today, causing deepening poverty and increasing international instability. This isn’t a talk about bitcoin, but deep financial reform, multiple currency systems with an emphasis on Mutual Credit, seen in part, through an eco-anarchist filter."
There will be two parts to the talk, the first part is definitions and types of money, some advantages and disadvantages.
The second part will be about radical and people owned approaches to money. Hugh will include references to technical work that has already been done, working examples elsewhere in the world, some of the controversies and speculation about the immediate future.
This is a large, complex and controversial subject, and references for further reading will be supplied.
About Hugh Barnard - Hugh has an MSc in computing from the Open University and recently finished a philosophy BA at Birkbeck. He stood for the Greens in the 2017 Municipals and his outlook is probably adjacent to Bookchin’s eco-municipalism. Hugh is currently semi-retired and working on community currencies and open-source environmental sensing.
================ 
From Medact

 End the cycle of violence: Take action against UK arms fair DSEI
As many of you will now be aware, on June 20th the Court of Appeals ruled that the UK government’s licencing of the sale of arms to Saudi Arabia that were used in the devastating war in Yemen was unlawful. Since then, the government has now been forced to suspend export licences for Saudi Arabia and its coalition partners for weapons that may be used in the war in Yemen.
This is a positive first step, but we must go further in order to end the cycle of violence. The UK government continues to fuel the arms trade to countries that have been and are complicit in mass human rights abuses and destruction in places such as Yemen and Gaza.
Arms fairs such as the Defence and Security Equipment International (DSEI), taking place once again this September in London’s ExCeL Exhibition Centre, facilitate the sale of arms from the UK and all around the world. A number of companies who exhibit weapons and technology at DSEI have sold arms to Saudi Arabia, Israel, Kazakhstan and Turkey.
Take action with us by signing and sharing our open letter to the Secretary of State for International Trade urging him to commit to not hosting or supporting arms fairs such as DSEI.
--------------------------------


Events
============================

(UPDATE) From IWCE 
We'd like to invite you to register and create an interesting and sparkling day about:

Women Making History: locally, herethere and everywhere.
Saturday 7th September  11.00 - 3 pm

We are still inviting stories, poems, films and Exhibitions and we would really value what everyone has to offer.......

Contributions in any medium lasting.15/20 mins are invited.

It will be in the Working Class Movement Library in Salford (near Manchester) on Saturday 7th September. 11-3 pm. 
Free but donations welcome

Please get in touch to register - 
or Keith Venables iwceducation@yahoo.co.uk

We look forward to seeing you!
IWCE
===============================
From WCML
Working Class Movement Library
51 The Crescent,
Salford, M5 4WX

Not just Peterloo - our evening talks on state violence continue


7pm Wednesdays is the time for our series of free talks on state violence, Not just Peterloo.  There are two more talks in what's proving an excellent series.  We are keeping the library open after our usual closing time of 5pm so you can drop in beforehand and look at our detailed and much-praised Peterloo exhibition too.

Wed 10 July 7pm Jennifer Luff State surveillance of the 20th century left
From the early 1920s through the late 1940s, the British government operated a very large programme to identify, blacklist and dismiss suspected Communists working in HMG's munitions factories, shipyards and scientific establishments. This programme was kept secret from British workers and the British public, and it has remained so to the present day. This talk tells the history of Britain's secret red purge and reflects on its implications for modern British history and contemporary politics.
  Jennifer Luff is Associate Professor, Department of History at Durham University.

Wed 17 July 7pm Joanna Gilmore Lessons from Orgreave: policing, protest and resistance
In October 2016, then Home Secretary Amber Rudd ruled out a public inquiry into the ‘Battle of Orgreave’, arguing that “very few lessons” could be learned from a review of practices of three decades ago. The policing landscape, she suggested, has “changed fundamentally” in recent years, “at the political, legislative and operational levels”. In this talk Joanna will challenge claims of a progressive shift in the state’s response to protest and dissent since the 1980s. Drawing on empirical research into the policing of anti-war, anti-fascist and anti-fracking protests, she will highlight the continuing relevance of Orgreave, and the policing of the 1984-5 miners’ strike more generally, for contemporary policing practice.
  Joanna Gilmore is Lecturer in Law at the University of York researching public order policing, human rights and community-based responses to police misconduct. She is a founding member of the Northern Police Monitoring Project.
Full details at www.wcml.org.uk/events.
 -------------------------

Our Sam, the Middleton Man - film screening

On Saturday 3 August at 2pm we will be hosting a screening of ReelMCR’s new community film about Samuel Bamford, radical reformer, writer, handloom weaver and leader of the Middleton contingent who walked to Manchester on 16 August 1819 in a peaceful protest which turned into what we now know as Peterloo.
Admission free.
------------------------------
NEW
A day of women's protest at the Pankhurst Centre
The Pankhurst Centre is welcoming two projects, Greenham Women Everywhere and Remembering Resistance, to 62 Nelson Street on Thursday 15 August from 10am to 4pm.

Remembering Resistance is a project which celebrates 100 years of women's protest in the North of England. Do you have stories to tell about activism? Come and share your memories and any related objects with the project team, who will record these stories to inspire future generations. You can also take part in two guided walks from 62 Nelson Street to find out more about women activists in the local area, and to share your own stories. The walks, at 10.30am and 1.30pm, are free, but bookable via Eventbrite here

Greenham Women Everywhere - pop-up exhibition
Established in 1982, the Greenham Common Peace Camp brought women from all over the world to live together to protest peacefully and creatively about the threat to humankind from the nuclear arms race.
All set in a Greenham-inspired tent, this touring exhibition displays original photographs and archival material collated from some of the women involved. A video installation explores what political concerns and campaigns the Greenham Women are taking on today, and there will be a chance to meet some of the women themselves.
=====================
From CND
Remember Hiroshima and Nagasaki
The world says never again
2019 is the 74th anniversary of the bombings. Memorial events are planned across the UK for Hiroshima Day on the 6th August and Nagasaki Day on the 9th August.
Please join memorial events to support efforts to remember these catastrophic events & work towards a world where this can never happen again. The following are the events we know about so far, but keep an eye out on our web site for new events and let us know about events you are planning. 

3 August  Hiroshima: Birmingham commemoration; Hiroshima vigil and ceremony, Bromley
4 August  Hiroshima Day Peace Walk – London
Hiroshima and Nagasaki event: Southampton
Hiroshima Haiku workshop at the Ditchling Museum of Art and Craft,  (BSL interpreted)
6 August  (until 9th) Hiroshima and Nagasaki Days of Action
Hiroshima: Liverpool  East Midlands CND, Derby  Edinburgh  
Hiroshima Peace Picnic: Charlton, London  Hiroshima: Wimbledon, London
Hiroshima Day commemoration – Sutton for Peace and Justice
International Fast for Nuclear Disarmament
Annual floating lantern ceremony at the Peace Pagoda, Willen Lake North
7 August  Seminar: The most dangerous scientist in history, at The Royal Institution, London
11 August  Hiroshima and Nagasaki: Wimbledon picnic
==========================
Events at Housmans
Housmans Bookshop
5 Caledonian Road
King’s Cross
London N1 9DX
Tel: 020 7837 4473
We’re very easy to find – just a two minute walk from King’s Cross/St.Pancras terminals. Housmans is at the bottom end of Caledonian Road where it meets with Pentonville Road.
  1. ‘Curious King’s Cross’ with Andrew Whitehead

    Wednesday August 7 @ 7:00 pm - 8:00 pm
  2. ‘Different Class: Football, Fashion and Funk – The Story of Laurie Cunningham’ with Dermot Kavanagh 

    Wednesday August 21 @ 7:00 pm - 8:00 pm
  1. ‘The Twittering Machine’ with Richard Seymour

    Wednesday September 4 @ 7:00 pm8:00 pm
  2. ‘Prison: a Survival Guide’, with Carl Cattermole and Erika Flowers

    Wednesday September 11 @ 7:00 pm - 8:00 pm
  3. ‘Back to Black: Retelling Black Radicalism for the 21st Century’ with Kehinde Andrews

    Wednesday September 18 @ 7:00 pm - 8:00 pm
==========================
From Marketing Manger, Open City Documentary Festival in London.

As part of the festival this year, we have an event with artist and psychogeographer Laura Grace Ford. She's curating a screening of archival television documentaries from the early 90s, exploring the poll tax riots, housing, architecture and the politics of the time
One of these will be an episode from the series 'Summer on the Estate', set on the old Kingsland estate, whilst the other is "The Battle of Trafalgar' which looks at London more generally. 

Her work is really interesting, and she'll be present to introduce and discuss the work she's chosen, placing it within an idea of these films being "catalysts for new social imaginaries." I thought this event might be of interest to you, considering the local / historical themes, hence my getting in touch.

... You can see the event details here.

At @OpenCityDocs 2019, artist and writer Laura Grace Ford (@LauraOF) will host 'An Act of Unforgetting': a programme of archival TV documentaries centred around social and political upheaval in London during the summer of 1990: http://bit.ly/LauraGraceFordOCDF
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We are thrilled to announce our next event:
image.png 
Many thanks to Notts Zine Library and Nottingham Contemporary for hosting the event. 
Further details TBC shortly, but please start to spread the word! 

And we would like to hear from you: 
* Were you involved in the production or distribution of these or any other titles?
* Do you have any stories or anecdotes you would like to share in relation to these or similar publications?
* Do you have a box or a folder of similar materials in your attic (beneath your bed/in the shed) and would consider to either donate them to us or loan them to us for digitisation?

If so, we would very much like to hear from you (please note that we usually respond to emails rather fast - if you do not have an answer after three days, please check your spam folder!) - sparrowsnestlibrary@gmail.com 
========================

Follow-up to earlier notification:
The Little Rebels Award for Children's Fiction 2019 was decided at an event on Wednesday 10th July. The result and details of the winner can be found on our previous posting about the shortlist
========================

Monday, June 3, 2019

Special 'News from Nowhere' talk on 8 June and other June events

The Challenges of Migration of Caribbean Women to Britain    
Speaker: Dr Elaine Arnold
"The mass migration to Britain occurred without adequate preparation of the migrants and of the indigenous people. Nothing was done to help the latter to examine their stereotypical views of black people and to be less hostile to their presence. The migrants could not have anticipated the devastating effects that their experiences of broken attachments, separation and loss of all that was familiar would have upon them. Neither did they envisage the level of hostility based on prejudice & racial discrimination from every level of the communities in which they tried to settle. These experiences deepened their sense of isolation and loss and very often led to irrational behaviour. The intergenerational patterns of avoidant or disorganised attachments seem to be factors contributing to some of the current anti-social behaviour problems of many of the young people of African Caribbean origin."

Dr Arnold has worked as a teacher, lecturer, counsellor and psychiatric social worker in Child Guidance; has taught Masters of Social Work students at Goldsmiths College and Sussex University and was a founder member and Director of Training at Nafsiyat (Intercultural Therapy Centre). She researched the adverse effects of separation, loss and sometimes traumatic reunions due to immigration from the West Indies to Britain among some families of African Caribbean origin. This led to the publication of Working with Families of African CaribbeaOrigin: Understanding Issues around Immigration and Attachment.  The mass migration to Britain occurred without adequate preparation of the migrants and of the indigenous people.  Nothing was done to help the latter to examine their stereotypical views of black people and to be less hostile to their presence.  The migrants could not have anticipated the devastating effects that their experiences of broken attachments, separation and loss of all that was familiar would have upon them. Neither did they envisage the level of hostility based on prejudice and racial discrimination from every level of the communities in which they tried to settle. These experiences deepened their sense of isolation and loss and very often led to irrational behaviour. The intergenerational patterns of avoidant or disorganised attachments seem to be factors contributing to some of the current anti-social behaviour problems of many of the young people of African Caribbean origin.  Currently Dr Arnold is Director of Supporting Relationships and Families. She also continues to lecture at various colleges and voluntary groups on the theory of attachment, separation and loss and its applicability to practice in the caring professions.

Buffet 7.30pm
Talk 8pm
Epicentre, West St E11 4LJ
Enquiries 0208 555 5248

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Tangentially Related News from Medact - 

[1]
Save the date: 20th June Refugee Day

We will be hosting a joint event with Medact, MSF and others to mark and celebrate World Refugee Day on 20th June, from 6.30pm.

It will include speakers from each group, and possibly a short film, and a chance to meet others in the group in a cool co-operative space, Newspeak House. Full details to be announced separately, but for now here's the address and time. 

6.30pm
Newspeak House
133 Bethnal Green Rd,
London, E2 7DG

UPDATE:
Join us on 20th June for an evening of short films and discussion to celebrate World Refugee Day.

Thursday 20th June
6:30pm
Newspeak House, Bethanl Green, E2 7DG 


We will be showing a selection of shorts exploring the themes of identity and inclusion. We are delighted to be joined by the Directors Caroline, Laura, and Adeyemi who will introduce their films and join us in a discussion exploring people's experience of migration and the impact of the Hostile Environment on migrant communities.

There will also be an opportunity to hear about what Migrant Solidarity Group, Medact, the MSF Take Action Group and Docs not cops are doing and to meet other folk from the group.

The event is free to all, no one will be turned away. The venue is accessible.
-------------------

[2]

As part of Medact’s work on peace, security and health, we are beginning a new piece of research into the impacts and use of counter-terrorism policies in the NHS. In particular, we are interested in the Prevent duty – a strand of UK counter-terror strategy that asks public sector workers, such as NHS staff, teachers and social workers, to identify those deemed to be at risk of radicalisation.
Are you interested in taking part in a 1-hour small focus group on this issue where we will explore experiences, knowledge and opinions on the Prevent duty in the NHS? Could you help organise a focus group in your area? No prior knowledge is needed to participate in this and responses will be anonymised.
Wherever you are in the UK we would love to hear from you, and are particularly keen to connect with people in Birmingham, Leicester, Manchester, Bradford and Luton. 
Please e-mail me, reemabuhayyeh@medact.org for more information, and you can find read more about the Prevent Duty in this [Medact] blog.

Peace and Security Campaigner 

See also Migration & Health on Medact website. 
Other local groups at www.medact.org/groups
-----------------------

And just in from Liberty (3-6-19. 11.38 a.m.)

US President Donald Trump landed safely at Stansted Airport this morning for his three-day state visit – but his time here doesn’t have to be smooth sailing.
We’ll be at the Stop Trump protest tomorrow, not just to demonstrate against his anti-migrant rhetoric and rights-abusing policies, but to highlight how they are replicated here in the UK.
Our Government is the only one in Europe which sanctions locking up migrants – including survivors of torture, rape and human trafficking – without release dates. 
The ‘hostile environment’ has left people too afraid to seek medical care, report crimes to the police or send their children to school in case it results in detention and deportation.
And Northern Ireland has some of the strictest and most dangerous anti-abortion laws in the western world.
If you’re protesting in London tomorrow, come and say hi, or feel free to join us from 11am at Trafalgar Square. We’ll be in the Migrants’ Rights Zone by the entrance to the National Gallery.
Tomorrow thousands of people will stand up to power and send a clear message that human rights are universal and we won’t let anyone take them from us.
===============

Thursday, December 13, 2018

Events into the New Year: Listings Update

Thomas Helliker: Annual Wreath Laying Ceremony 
Invitation to annual commemoration



Friday 22 March

The annual Wreath Laying organised by White Horse (Wiltshire) Trades Union Council to commemorate Thomas Helliker will take place on Friday 22 March at 12.00noon at Thomas Helliker's Tomb in St James Churchyard, Trowbridge. 

Thomas Helliker, (sometimes spelt Hilliker or Elliker) is often referred to as the Trowbridge Martyr.  He was a young apprentice shearman working in the woollen industry.  
When Littleton Mill, near Trowbridge was burned down in protest at the introduction of machinery he was apprehended on false accusation despite having an alibi and protesting his innocence. Although he probably knew those who had set the fire, he steadfastly refused to name them. He was charged and sent for trial, in Salisbury where he was subsequently found guilty and was hanged at Fisherton Goal on his 19th birthday on 22 March 1803 despite public outrage. 
It is likely that he had been framed by powerful clothiers determined to make an example.

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IN-STORE EVENTS AT HOUSMANS 
Housmans regularly have a variety of events in the shop, and always welcome suggestions from authors, artists and campaigners who want to use the shop for evening events. Past events include talks, book signings, film screenings, art exhibitions and musical performances: click here for an archive; which includes a number of selected filmed highlights. Also, you can view video from some special events here.
"Sex Drive: On the Road to a Pleasure Revolution" 
with Stephanie Theobald
Thursday 10th January, 7pm
Entry £3 redeemable against any purchase


'The Happiness Fantasy' with Carl Cederstrom

Wednesday 23rd January, 7pm
Entry £3 redeemable against any purchase


'Rethinking Racial Capitalism' with Gargi Bhattacharyya
Wednesday 30th January, 7pm
Entry £3 redeemable against any purchase


Housmans Bookshop, 5 Caledonian Road, King’s Cross,
London, N1 9DX
tel: 020 7837 4473
  e: shop@housmans.com

==================
NEWS FROM NOWHERE CLUB
Programme 2019
At the Epicentre, West St, E11 4LJ
7.30pm Buffet (please bring veggie item if you can)
8.00pm Talk/discussion till 10pm & back to buffet
Travel and Access
Stratford stations & 257 bus
Leytonstone tube (exit left) & 257/W14 bus
Overground: Leytonstone High Road, turn right, short walk  Disabled access
Car park / bikes can be brought in
Quiet children welcome
Phone to confirm the talk will be as shown
Open to all; no booking, just turn up
Enquiries 0208 555 5248 or  roskane@btinternet.com

Saturday 12th January 2019

Waltham Forest Animal Protection Warriors!   

Speakers: Rachel Barrett, Mark Dawes, Margaret Winniak, K-Star
K-Star, Margaret, Mark & Rachel, members of Waltham Forest Animal Protection, will speak about their work in helping animals in our borough & beyond. The group was set up in August 2014. Meetings have included speakers from near & far:  from Waltham Forest Cats Protection to Animals Asia. Members have been successful in stopping Aldi from chopping down trees with nesting birds; in removing lethal, bird-trapping netting on buildings; & in encouraging the Council to scan pets killed in road traffic accidents. Along with advice on what to do if you find sick or injured wildlife, topics for debate will include:

  •   Going vegan is the best way to save the planet
  •   It's unethical to experiment on animals
  •   It's wrong to use animals for entertainment or sport!
  •   All fur should be banned. The group is campaigning to get the sale of fur banned in Waltham Forest.
Saturday 9th February 2019
Life, the Universe and Everything Else.     
Speaker: Brian Madican


Have you ever wondered about where the universe comes from or how did it come into being? Ever pondered on the meaning of life, what is the purpose of it all, why do human beings exist & other similar questions that have baffled the philosophers down the centuries? Then come along & listen to Brian as he tackles these questions & more in this shamelessly plagiarised, but modestly entitled, talk.


Ward window on the world:
West  London Dec. 2018
Saturday 9th March 2019
The End of the NHS? Much Closer Than You Think

Speaker: Carol Saunders


In its 70th year, it’s an open secret that the NHS is struggling as never before. We’ve been bombarded with stories about missed targets, bed shortages, staff shortages, A&E & hospital closures & the dire lack of services for mental health patients. But that’s just the headlines. Come & hear the jaw-dropping back-story of how, back in 2013-14, the World Economic Forum drew up a blueprint for dismantling worldwide socialised health services – a blueprint that’s being followed, right now, in the English NHS. Carol is a campaigner with Tower Hamlets Keep our NHS Public / NE London Save our NHS.


Saturday 13th April 2019

George Orwell, the Labour Party and the Left   

Speaker: Professor John Newsinger

George Orwell was a lifelong socialist. As far as he was concerned, socialism was involved in the achievement of a democratic classless society, a society in which the rich had been altogether dispossessed. His experiences in Spain in the 1930s convinced him that this would require a revolution & he held to this belief through the Second World War, even hoping that the Attlee government might go down a revolutionary road. This talk examines the trajectory of his political thinking & his changing attitudes towards the Labour Party. John Newsinger is Professor of Modern History at Bath Spa University & the author of several books, including the graphic novel, 1917: The Red Year. He is co-editor of the journal George Orwell Studies. His book on Orwell, ‘Hope Lies in the Proles’: Orwell & the Left, came out in 2018. John was unable to be with us last year after all, but will be in 2019.

More to follow monthly throughout the year.
=====================

Bishopsgate Institute 230 Bishopsgate London EC2M 4QH Archives Tour -

Women's and Feminist History
28 March | 18.30 | £7 / £5 conc.
Join our Library and Digital Archives Manager to hear the fascinating stories of the

Suffragettes and activists that lie within our women’s and feminist history collections.
===================

WCML
Working Class Movement Library
51 The Crescent,
SalfordM5 4WX
Library opening hours over the festive periodChristmas 2018 - NB that the Library will close at 5pm on Friday 21 December 
until Tuesday 2 January at 10am
If you're not one already and would like to become a Friend of the Library, or to buy someone else a Friend's subscri for Christmas, head here

Our current exhibition Votes for women . . . or votes for ladies? runs until 24 January, and is open Wednesdays to Fridays 1-5pm.  It celebrates the first step that parliament took, one hundred years ago, towards all adult women finally gaining the right to vote.
The exhibition is part of our Heritage Lottery Fund project Voting for change and features various items acquired as part of this project.  A summary of recent news about our Voting for Change project can be found here.
Pankhurst Centre exhibition
The Pankhurst Centre [Manchester] is holding an exhibition about Manchester's response to the centenary of some women gaining the right to vote.  Centenary City runs until 10 March, Thursdays 10am-4pm and on the 2nd and 4th Sunday of each month 1-4pm.  
It features a selection of objects from some of the city's key #Vote100 moments including banners, artwork, leaflets and badges; these have been collected to become part of an archive to record how Manchester has commemorated this landmark year.

2019 events update
Our early 2019 events listing is now available at www.wcml.org.uk/events.  

Exhibitions
A guest exhibition, Guernica Remakings, will open on 31 January exploring the ongoing power of Pablo Picasso’s iconic 1937 painting Guernica through a display of 21st century reworkings from across the globe.  The exhibition, which marks the 80th anniversary of the extraordinary story of the showing of Picasso’s Guernica in a car showroom in Manchester, runs until 20 March and is open Wednesdays to Fridays 1-5pm, and the first Saturday of the month 10am-4pm.  It is part of an international tour echoing the spirit in which Picasso’s Guernica toured, and functions as both an anti-fascist statement and a call to action.
All are welcome to attend the exhibition launch evening – Thursday 31 January 6pm.
The curator of the exhibition, Nicola Ashmore, Senior Lecturer in History of Art and Design at the University of Brighton, will also give an illustrated talk on Wednesday 13 March at 2pm that explores Guernica and its remakings as a call to action, pushing back at those in power who choose to act to the detriment of civilians.
There is a press release about the exhibition here.

Spring series of free Wednesday 2pm Invisible Histories talks
Our spring series of free Wednesday 2pm Invisible Histories talks starts up again on 13 March with Nicola Ashmore, curator of our current Guernica Remakings exhibition, and artist Claire Hignett speaking about aspects of the exhibition. (See above)

27 March Tom Woodin  Working class writing and publishing in the late 20th century: literature, culture and community

10 April  Sally Groves  Out on the Costa del Trico!

24 April  Rob Hargreaves  Beyond Peterloo: Elijah Dixon and Manchester’s forgotten reformers.

LGBT History Month - Glyn Salton-Cox, 'Queer Communism'
We are delighted to welcome Glyn Salton-Cox, Assistant Professor of English and Affiliate of Feminist Studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara, to mark LGBT History Month with us on Saturday 9 February at 2pm
Glyn states: ‘It is well known that many of the best-known queer writers of the 1930s were involved with Communist politics. Why, then, has there been no extended examination of this striking juncture of dissident sex and socialism?’ His talk to us explores this question, among others, aiming to transform current narratives of 20th century literary, cultural, and intellectual history from a queer Marxist perspective. It will also explore the contemporary problem of populism, arguing we can learn important lessons from the queer radicalism of the 1930s that can help formulate strategies of resistance to today’s multi-layered oppressions in both Britain and the US.
Admission free; light refreshments available; all welcome. 

International Women's Day 
We mark International Women's Day on Saturday 2 March with an afternoon (2pm start) focussed on a project bringing to life the last 100 years of women’s protest, discussing the changing nature of women’s activism and some of the more significant protest sites in the North.
Remembering Resistance: a Century of Women’s Protest in the North of England is a Heritage Lottery Funded project that aims to catalogue, celebrate, and engage the public in women's efforts to bring about political change. There will be talks plus the opportunity to get involved with the project by recalling your own memories of women’s campaigning.
Admission free; light refreshments available; all welcome.

Townsend Productions - Rouse, ye women
We are delighted to welcome back Townsend Productions on Monday 11 and Tuesday 12 March (7.30pm start) with their new musical drama Rouse, ye women. Through traditional songs and ballads we will learn the story of the women chainmakers of Cradley Heath in the West Midlands.  In 1910 they began a successful ten-week strike, led by charismatic union campaigner Mary Macarthur, to more than double their earnings and establish the principle of a national minimum wage. 
The strike was a prelude to the ‘Great Unrest’ of industrial action that swept Britain in 1911, and led to a landmark victory for a fair wage, changing the lives of thousands of workers, whilst proving their economic power.
The evening features original songs and music composed by folk musician John Kirkpatrick (Steeleye Span, Home Service, Richard Thompson Band, etc.).
Tickets price £12.75 (£10.75 concession, £6.75 student) available here.

No country for women 
In an Irish Mancunian event marking the 100th anniversary of the revolutionary first Dáil Éireann, No country for women, on Sunday 20 January 2pm at Chorlton Irish Club, Sonja Tiernan will examine how women played a central role in establishing the Irish Free State but were then relegated to the margins of political and public life. There will also be a screening of an RTE documentary examining Irish women's lives over the past 100 years.
Full details & tickets at www.wegottickets.com/mancirish.  

PLUS
Radical Readings fundraiser  update - tickets on sale 
The Working Class Movement Library is proud to present another in its series of Radical Readings fundraising events - 'Those who were there - the people at Peterloo have their say'.  It will take place in Maxwell Hall at the University of Salford on Sunday 14 April at 2pm, and tickets price £15 plus booking fee are on sale online via www.wcml.org.uk/radicalreadings.

Christopher Eccleston, Sheila Hancock, Julie Hesmondhalgh, Mike Joyce, Nico Mirallegro and Maxine Peake, who are all strong supporters of the Library, are booked to appear.  They will be reading accounts of the dreadful event of Peterloo - concentrating on the reports of those people who were actually there rather than on later comments.  There will also be poetry from Oliver James Lomax, and ballads from Jennifer Reid.  The event is devised and introduced by Royston Futter, Working Class Movement Library trustee.
Everyone at the Library is delighted that these tremendous performers have agreed so willingly to contribute their time and their talent to boost its fundraising appeal.  
All proceeds will go to support the Working Class Movement Library
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Also notified by WCML: 
War and an Irish Town 
On Sunday 10 February from 2 to 4pm Irish Mancunian will be welcoming Derry civil rights leader Eamonn McCann to Chorlton Irish Club, 17 High Lane, Manchester M21 9DJ to discuss his republished book War and an Irish Town. First published in 1974, it provides a vivid account of the development of the civil rights movement and the transformation of peaceful protest - driven off the streets - into armed conflict.  Eamonn will be discussing the book and reflecting on more recent developments in conversation with Dr Paddy Hoey of Edge Hill University.

Before the speaker there will also be a screening of the documentary 'The Day the Troubles Began', which puts the marches in the context of the international influences that drove people to take to the streets in protest in Chicago, Paris and elsewhere.

Tickets price £4 in advance, and more information, at www.wegottickets.com/mancirish.
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Co-operative University Information Day
An information event about the planned Co-operative University will take place 
on Tuesday 5 March 2019 at The Federation, Manchester.

The free event, running from 12.15 to 4.30 p.m., will highlight what’s different about a Co-operative University, offer more information about the degree programmes that are planned, and highlight how you can get involved.
Undergraduate programmes will include: 
  • International Development and Co-operation
  • Social Movements
  • Co-operative Leadership, Culture and Management.
Also planned are accredited higher education programmes in Democratic PracticeSocial and Community OrganisingCommunity History and CultureHuman EcologyArt and Community, Alternative Forms of Social and Economic Organisation and The Nature and Future of Work.

More details, including how to book a free place at the event, here.

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London CND's 2019 conference
on the theme 'Trump's finger on the nuclear button' - 
speakers including Catherine West MP and Green Party Co-Leader Jonathan Bartley.
12 noon - 5pm on Saturday 12th January,
Tickets are free!

Future Wars videos

Videos from the conference on new technology and the future of warfare are now up on our website - including this clip of Nobel Peace Prize winner Arielle Denis. 

Trump Trashes INF Treaty

Read our analysis of Trump's withdrawal from the INF treaty, and its fallout.

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UPDATE FROM LSHG

The London Socialist Historians Group which organises the socialist history seminar at the Institute of Historical Research, now in its 25th year, has reiterated its support for workers involved in a long running dispute at the University of London’s Senate House in Bloomsbury over the outsourcing of support staff (those who actually keep the place running).
After industrial action and protests by the IWGB trade union who organise many of the workers involved the University agreed to bring outsourced work back in-house. However it has delayed the timescale originally proposed for this. As a result the IWGB have called for a boycott of Senate House.
The LSHG has always supported the workers in dispute and indeed has cancelled seminars at Senate House on days when action has been taking place in solidarity.
We are supporting the boycott. We have three seminars scheduled at the Institute of Historical Research for late January and February 2019.
We are consulting with speakers about whether to take these forward in some form or postpone until a later date. The first seminar on 28thJanuary has been postponed.
That also means we are scheduling no more seminars at Senate House after the end of February for the time being in support of the IWGB members in dispute.
LSHG Convenor Dr Keith Flett said we believe that it is absolutely right that a socialist history seminar should stand in solidarity with Senate House workers and we are pleased to see that a growing number of other IHR seminars are also supporting the dispute.
Details of the dispute are here
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HEADS-UP FOR 
Haringey Local History Fair 2019
The date will be 16th February 2019  
11am- 4.30pm
Show-casing "local groups with an interest in the history, social history, natural history and architecture of Haringey ... also groups and individuals with a special project each year, or those who are also taking part in the talks programme.   A stall normally consists of a 6ft table where you can promote your group, sell books and merchandise and meet members of the public.  Booking is free."   
(Look out for the RaHN stall, as usual.) 
Information and contact: Haringey Local History Library and Archives
Bruce Castle Museum
Lordship Lane
London N17 8NU

Phone: 020 8808 8772
Fax:  020 8808 4118
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Anarchism talks in Nottingham 28th Jan & 4th Feb 2019
The Meaning of Anarchism, via twelve libertarians
Venue: Five Leaves Bookshop 14a Long Row, Nottingham NG1 2DH.
£3.00 on the door, including refreshments.
Anarchism is a much misunderstood and much misrepresented theory. Rejecting the chaos of capitalism and statism, it seeks to create the order of libertarian socialism, a free society of free associates. To discover more, please join Iain McKay (author of An Anarchist FAQ) for an exploration of libertarian ideas by means of six male and six female anarchist thinkers and activists.
Over two nights, the lives and ideas of the founding fathers and mothers of anarchism – including Michael Bakunin, Peter Kropotkin, Louise Michel and Emma Goldman – will be discussed and their continuing relevance highlighted.
Week one -- Monday, 28th January: 7:00 pm - 8:30 pm
Founding Fathers, 1840 to 1940: Pierre-Joseph Proudhon; Joseph Dejacques;  Michael Bakunin; Errico Malatesta; Peter Kropotkin; Rudolf Rocker
Week two – Monday, 4th February: 7:00 pm - 8:30 pm
Founding Mothers, 1840 to 1940; André Léo; Louise Michel; Lucy Parsons; Emma Goldman; Voltairine de Cleyre; Marie-Louis Berneri
Link for more info (and notes from previous talks)

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UPDATES from IWCE
Independent Working Class Education


Working-Class Adult Education in Yorkshire between the wars 
- what can we learn for today?’


Saturday 30th March at York Friends Meeting House.

Presenters will include: Christine Pushpa Kumbhat, Richard Lewis, Sharon Clancy, a WEA speaker and Colin Waugh. 
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10.30-3.30 Saturday 30 March 2019
Quaker Meeting House, Lower Friargate, York YO1 9RL
Admission (includes lunch): £5.00 (pay on day)

To sign up, contact Keith Venables at: iwceducation@yahoo.co.uk
Presenters:
  • Christine Pushpa* Kumbhat (author of ‘Working Class Adult Education in Yorkshire 1918-1939’ - Google this title to access her thesis.)
  • Richard Lewis (author of Leaders and Teachers. Adult Education and the Challenge of Labour in South Wales, 1906-1940)
  • Sharon Clancy (Raymond Williams Foundation, Adult Education 100)
  • Rob Hindle (Senior Area Education Manager, WEA Yorkshire)
  • Colin Waugh (author of ‘Plebs’: The Lost Legacy of Independent
  • Working-Class Education)
The day will consist of five sessions, with an introductory talk by each speaker, and there will be plenty of opportunity for discussion. 

* In the tradition of Ruth Frow’s unpublished 1968 thesis on the Labour Colleges in Lancashire 1909-1930, and Richard’s ground-breaking 1996 book about WEA/Labour College interaction in South Wales, Pushpa will speak about her important December 2017 Leeds University thesis, which deals with WEA, Plebs League/National Council of Labour Colleges and Cooperative Society adult education in Yorkshire between the wars, focusing especially on the WEA/NCLC interaction.

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Raphael Samuel Memorial Lecture 2019
Yasmin Khan
Women on the frontline of empire: a feminist history of the Second World War’
 Thursday 7th March 2019, 6.00 – 7.30pm
Wine reception to follow

Venue:   Arts 2 Lecture Theatre, Queen Mary University of London, 
Mile End Road, London E1 4NS. 
To locate the venue, please click on this campus map.

Free of charge, but please reserve your place via Eventbrite

Imperial soldiers played a significant and increasingly well acknowledged part in the Second World War, but what about the women of the British empire? What stories might global and feminist histories of the Second World War reveal? Along the thoroughfares of empire, from Aden to Calcutta and Hong Kong, women’s lives were transformed by the pressures of the global war. This lecture will consider some of the most marginal and forgotten voices in British Second World War history. 

Yasmin Khan is an Associate Professor of British History at the University of Oxford. She has published on the decolonization of South Asia including refugees, war and the Partition of 1947, most recently The Raj at War (Bodley Head, 2015). In 2018 she presented a short series, A Passage to Britain,  on BBC2.

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A couple of things from Medact
Food Justice Workshop - London, Wednesday 30th January A Medact workshop for healthcare professionals working across the healthcare services who are interested in becoming involved with campaigns on food justice and health. More details on the website calendar.
Centre for Sustainable Healthcare workshops - London, Saturday 12th & Sunday 13th January 2019 Our friends at the CSH are running this excellent pair of workshops for leadership in sustainability and health and sustainability in quality improvement for up to 20 people.
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UPDATE from Medact
Local Group Meetings
London - Tuesday 29th January, 7pm - Join us to discuss our forthcoming plans for campaigning at the Medact Office, The Grayston Centre, 28 Charles Square, N1 6HT.
Scotland - Thursday 28th February, 7.30pm - Join us at Citizen M Hotel, 60 Renfrew St, Glasgow G2 3BW.
Tyneside - Monday 4th February, 2.30pm -Please email Elizabeth Waterston tyneside@medact.org for details.
Oxford - Wednesday 6th March - Details TBC, please sign up to the group mailing list about meeting info at  medact.org/oxford 

‘Selling the Military’ report launch
Launch event for Medact and ForcesWatch’s new report 
Selling the military: A critical analysis of contemporary recruitment marketing, 
on Thursday 27th February, 
at Wesley’s Chapel & Leysian Mission in Old Street, London.
Details on Events page

The new report analyses the way that the armed forces market their careers to adolescents and young people. The evening will review how military marketing campaigns create powerful messages that at times exploit developmental vulnerabilities and social inequality, risking the health and wellbeing of recruits.
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2nd March 2019 at Bloomsbury Central, London WC2
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See https://conscientiousobjectionremembered.wordpress.com
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These listings will be updated from time to time.