Showing posts with label arms trade. Show all posts
Showing posts with label arms trade. 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."
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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.
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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
========================

Friday, September 1, 2017

Autumn Listings continued

NB: Not in chronological (or reverse chronological) order

Bit late posting this, sorry - 
Thu., 7 September, 11am – 4pm
ExCel, London E16 1XL, UK (maphttp://vfpuk.org/2017/stop-the-arms-fair/
Veterans For Peace will be taking action at the Excel Centre in East London during the set up of the DSEi Arms Fair.
Our Statement of Purpose says “we will work to end the arms race and to reduce and eventually eliminate nuclear weapons”. The DSEi Arms Fair is a key driver in the arms race. 
Our Statement of Purpose says “we will work to restrain our government from intervening, overtly and covertly, in the internal affairs of other nations”. The DSEi Arms Fair* provides the tools for the invasions and occupations ordered by our government. 
On Thursday 7 September all members of Veterans For Peace are encouraged to attend the East Gate of the Excel Centre. 
We will be carrying out citizen’s inspections of the vehicles arriving at the Arms Fair to ensure that no weapons banned under the Geneva Conventions are being brought into the fair for sale. Meet at PRINCE REGENT DLR STATION between 1030 and 1100 on Thursday 7 September. Coordinator: Ben Griffin 07866 559 312 Dress: VFP Blue Hoody / Sweatshirt / T-shirt Travel: The Underground Jubilee Line to Canning Town, change onto a Beckton-bound DLR train, to Prince Regent for ExCeL (East).

[*RaHN Note: other protests at this event are probably available]
[RaHN UPDATE - There certainly have been multiple protests. See e.g. Guardian News Story
"More than 100 people arrested over London arms fair protests:
Activists try to prevent weapons firms from setting up stands at ExCel centre, saying arms may be used to commit war crimes"]
And more... 

"Banksy donates funds from anti-arms artwork sale" BBC 17-9-17

======================================================================
NEWS FROM NOWHERE CLUB
Saturday September 9th 2017
Ethel Mannin: Feminist, Anarchist, Anti-Fascist    
Speaker: Andy Simons
Andy will unpack the life of this working class yet wealth-sacrificing writer, social rebel, tireless campaigner & author of almost 100 books of fiction & non-fiction. The feminist ignored by feminists.  Ethel Mannin (1900-1984) was many things: single mum by design, anti-fascist & anti-British Mandate activist before World War 2, intrepid and sometimes illegal world traveller & consistent anarchist. Andy, former jazz archivist, radio presenter & author of ‘Black British Swing’, devotes his time to Palestinian rights activism, as did Ethel Mannin in the 1960s.
7.30pm buffet (please bring something if you can), 8pm talk
Epicentre, West Street, Leytonstone, London E11 4LJ
Free entry, no need to book
No admittance before 7.30pm
Enquiries 0208 555 5248 or roskane@btinternet.com
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‘REFUSING TO KILL’ – BRISTOL’S WORLD WAR 1 CONSCIENTIOUS OBJECTORS

FROM SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 9TH, THE REMEMBERING THE REAL WORLD WAR 1 GROUP ARE PRESENTING AN EXHIBITION ‘REFUSING TO KILL – BRISTOL’S WORLD WAR 1 CONSCIENTIOUS OBJECTORS‘ IN BRISTOL CATHEDRAL ON COLLEGE GREEN.  
THE EXHIBITION WILL RUN UNTIL EARLY JANUARY. 

Over 350 men from the Bristol area refused to fight in World War 1. They claimed the status of conscientious objector for moral, religious or political reasons. Some agreed to take non-military roles. Others spent much of the war in prison, often under harsh conditions. 

A largely untold part of Bristol’s World War 1 history – this exhibition tells the stories of these men and the people in the city who supported them. Rarely seen documents will be displayed together with photographs, letters from COs and artefacts. 

The exhibition will look at Why Conscription Was Introduced; What was a CO; Attitudes to COs – from government, churches, military, public; Local Networks Of Support; and the Long Term Effect of WW1 COs up to present day. 
You can help publicise the exhibition by liking/sharing the Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/RefusingtoKillBristolWW1COs/ 
There are printed flyers. If you know of anywhere they can be used please emailrememberingrealww1@gmail.com 
For Cathedral opening times see https://bristol-cathedral.co.uk/visit-us/opening-hours/ 
Alongside the exhibition there will be a series of talks, drama and musical events. 
For more information email rememberingrealww1@gmail.com

And there is a whole series on the real WW1 (among other things) at 
Bristol's Radical History Festival
Sunday September 17
More information and programme here.
------------------------
NEWS FROM NOWHERE CLUB (update)
Saturday 14th October 2017
 Cyclogeography:
Journeys of a London Bicycle Courier
Speaker: Jon Day
 Jon Day is a writer, literary critic and cyclist. He now teaches English Literature at King’s College London, but before this he worked as a cycle courier in London for many years. He will talk about the politics of cycling, the literary and cultural history of the cycle and the ways in which bicycles connect people with places.
Venue Epicentre, West Street, Leytonstone E11 4LJ
Times No admittance before 7.30pm: Vegetarian Buffet (bring something if you can).
8-10pm Talk & discussion
               Travel  Stratford stations & 257 bus 
              or Leytonstone tube (exit left) and 257 or W14 bus
Access  Disabled access, car park, bikes can be brought in, quiet children welcome.
You can phone to confirm the talk will be as shown.
Meetings open to all - just turn up. Enquiries  0208 555 5248                   
Free entry / raffle / voluntary donations
=====================

Black History Month in Ealing Libraries

"There is a range of in-depth and informative talks for adults, to a choice of children's activities including the opportunity to meet the creator of 'Rastamouse'."
Including: 

BHM Talk: An Inspirational Journey

  • Where:Ealing Central Library
  • When:Tuesday 17th October 2017, 6:00 pm
  • Admission:FREE, no booking required
Vi Thomas is Director of Nursing at NHS England (London). Coming to the UK in the 1960s she has worked in a variety of leadership roles within the health sector. Vi will be sharing her career journey in the NHS, and reflecting on the importance of the role of BME staff since the 1960s until today.
Suitable for adults. Ealing Central Library.
=====================
King’s Fund

Understanding the NHS Over Time: Archives, Voices, Policy
26 September 2017
The King’s Fund, 11-13 Cavendish Square, London

The King’s Fund Information and Knowledge Services and the People’s History of the NHS are delighted to be hosting a joint event on the afternoon of 26 September 2017, entitled Understanding the NHS Over Time: Archives, Voices, Policy.
The event will see a number of presentations aimed at exploring the history of health policy and the NHS over time. The afternoon will offer the opportunity to learn about the findings of the People’s History research project and the King’s Fund’s digital archive project. Talks will also include the recollections of health historian Geoffrey Rivett’s experiences and a member of the policy team from the King’s Fund to talk about how policy had developed up to the present.
As well as a series of talks the afternoon will end with an exhibition enabling attendees to explore physical artefacts from King’s Fund archives and the people’s history project.
To find out more about the event, please visit here.
[Note: the 2008 RaHN pamphlet on the NHS can be seen here as a pdf.]
======================
Leeds People's Assembly
Left Bank Cinema: The Stuart Hall Project
October 26 @ 7:30 pm - 10:30 pm
£4 - £5
Made from artfully assembled fragments of film, television, radio and photographic archives, this film presents the story of the astonishing life of a black intellectual in post-colonial Britain.
Stuart’s sincere and thoughtful narration guides us through his experiences, from arriving in Oxford on a scholarship from Jamaica in 1951 to becoming one of the foremost intellectuals of the British Left, director of the Birmingham School of Cultural Studies and professor of sociology at the Open University.
This film shows Stuart Hall’s clarity of vision as he sought to expand the study of change, revolution and the political struggles of a turbulent 20th century through the use of cultural frameworks.
John Akomfrah / UK / 2013 / 103 minutes
 Certificate 12
Details: http://leftbankleeds.org.uk/event/left-bank-cinema-the-stuart-hall-project/
======================
London Socialist Historians Seminars
Autumn 2017
Seminars are held on alternate Mondays, 5.30pm 
at the Institute of Historical Research, Senate House, Malet St, London, WC1. 
They are free to attend without ticket.

Monday October 16th John Rees, The Leveller Revolution
Monday October 30th  tba

UPDATE:
London Socialist Historians seminar. All welcome.
Monday 30 October Merilyn Moos 'Neglected Histories of the Diverse Victims of Nazism'
Room 304 Institute of Historical Research, Senate House, Malet St, WC1 5.30pm
"Jews were not the only people targeted by the Nazis during the Holocaust. Communists, Socialists, Anarchists, trade unionists, Resistance fighters, Poles, Roma, persons with disabilities, black people, Soviet prisoners of war, gay people and Jehovah’s Witnesses, were all persecuted and frequently murdered in large numbers by the
Third Reich. The Nazis had a particular hatred for those who had fought in the International Brigades during the Spanish Civil War. Many forgotten stories need to be reclaimed."

Monday November 13th Christian Hogsbjerg, 'Every Cook Can Govern': C.L.R James and the Russian Revolution’

George Orwell (BBC via Penguin)
Monday November 27th John Newsinger, 
From Revolution to Labourism?: Orwell and the Left'


Monday December 11th tba 




====================

WCML Round-up:
Working Class Movement Library
51 The Crescent
SalfordM5 4WX
Free Wednesday 2pm talks series:-

13 Sept                 Jennifer Reid
Comparing Manchester, Lancashire and Bangladeshi traditional song
During a research visit to Dhaka this year, Jennifer discovered many links between Manchester and Lancashire traditional songs and those from Dhaka and Sylhet. Using the shared cotton industry which has acted as a bridge between the UK and Bangladesh, there are relevant comparisons to be made.
Jennifer will also help us launch our contribution to the project ‘A History of Lancashire in 70 Objects'. This is a Heritage Lottery Funded project run in partnership between Lancashire Heritage Learning, Lancashire Life and Museum Development North West. To celebrate the 70th anniversary of Lancashire Life, 70 objects have been chosen with the help of the public from 70 different venues in the County Palatine, each telling a story from Lancashire. The project will run throughout September to November 2017, and aims to celebrate Lancashire's history whilst encouraging the people of Lancashire and beyond to explore and engage with their local history.
Our chosen object is a beautiful banner, donated to us as part of a fascinating archive of campaign material by the group Lancashire Women Against Pit Closures. You can read more about this archive on the library blog here. The banner is currently on display in our hall. 

27 Sept.  Could Salford produce another Shelagh Delaney? – round table discussion.
In anticipation of this year's Shelagh Delaney Day, join Shelagh's daughter Charlotte Delaney, her biographer Selina Todd and MaD Theatre Company to discuss whether opportunities exist for young working class women to find a voice and an audience almost 60 years after A Taste of Honey first appeared.

From WCML: Apologies - cancellation of Invisible Histories talk on 11 October 

Many apologies for the late notice, but we have just heard that our speaker is unwell. We have therefore had to cancel our Black History Month talk on the 1976-78 Grunwick strike.

We are however still remembering the Grunwick strike with a new play, We are the lions, Mr Manager, which is coming to the Library for two performances on Friday 20 and Saturday 21 October at 7.30pm.
The play is based on the experiences of Jayaben Desai, the inspirational leader of the strike, and of members of the Strike Committee, and tells of their long battle against the management and establishment forces to gain union recognition. 
The Friday performance has already sold out so we encourage you to book tickets for the performance on Saturday 21st as soon as possible here, price £12.50 (£10.50 concessions).

Future talks are:


25 Oct                   Angela Whitecross
The Co-operative Party 100 years on - a reflection

8 Nov                    Andy Clark
The occupation of the factories - women's resistance to factory closure in Scotland, 1981-82
 
22 Nov                  Cathy Hunt
Brave hearts and missionary zeal - the National Federation of Women Workers 1906-21

6 Dec                     Neil Faulkner
A people’s history of the Russian Revolution

Full details at 
www.wcml.org.uk/events.

The Library is marking Heritage Open Days 2017 with 'behind-the-scenes' tours on Thursday 7 and Friday 8 September at 2pm.  Book in advance via info@wcml.org.uk.

You can find out more about other local events and activities at 
https://www.heritageopendays.org.uk/visiting.
---------------------------------

On Thursday 21 September at 7pm we are pleased to host the launch of Citizens by Ian Parks.
  Ian Parks is the only poet to have his work published in the Morning Star and the Times Literary Supplement on the same day, and his new collection Citizens explores the tensions between poetry and politics, the spoken and the unspoken, the private and the public. Accompanied by the ghosts of the Chartist poets he listens to 'the voices of the lost and dispossessed' while visiting places of painful historical memory such as Orgreave, Cable Street, and Blackstone Edge.
At this event Mike Sanders, Senior Lecturer in 19th Century Writing at the University of Manchester, will interview Ian about his work and the radical tradition, after which Ian will give readings from his book.
  Ian Parks was born in 1959 and is the author of eight collections of poems, the most recent of which was a Poetry Book Society Choice. He was writer in residence at Gladstone's Library in 2012 and Writing Fellow at De Montfort University Leicester from 2012-14. He currently runs the Read to Write Project in Doncaster.
The Library will stay open on 21 September after its usual closing time of 5pm - drop in any time to browse items reflecting the themes of Ian's poetry, and purchased as part of Voting for Change, a joint project between the Library and the People's History Museum.
Admission free; light refreshments available
 -----------------------------------------
Townsend Theatre Productions' new play, written by Neil Gore, is premiering at the Library 
on Friday 20 and Saturday 21 October at 7.30pm.
We Are The Lions, Mr. Manager! is the remarkable story of Jayaben Desai, the inspirational leader of the 1976-78 Grunwick Strike. She not only stood up for workers’ rights and against oppression with selfless dedication, but with her steadfast resolve she turned the dispute into a national movement for human rights and dignity inspiring future generations.
Tickets can be booked in advance here, price £12.50 (£9.50 early bird, £10.50 concessions).
-----------------------------------------
"Very popular Marx & Engels exhibition" runs until 29 September and "celebrates the truly creative partnership between Karl Marx and Frederick Engels, and the body of revolutionary, philosophical and economic writings that their collaboration produced."
Exhibition open Wednesdays to Fridays 1-5pm, and Saturday 2 September 10am-4pm. Admission free.
There is now a booklet available containing text and illustrations from the exhibition.  It is available price £2 from the Library, or 
via our online shop.
A travelling version of the exhibition will soon be available for groups to borrow - let us know by emailing 
info@wcml.org.uk if you'd like to know more.  
There are also travelling versions of our last few exhibition available for lending - examples include Spirit of '45: from warfare to welfare, the James Connolly exhibition We only want the earth, and our WW1 conscientious objector exhibition To end all wars.
-------------------------
FURTHER UPDATES FROM WCML
Commemorations of the Irish Famine and of the Manchester Martyrs Timed to align with the National Famine event in Tipperary this September, on Sunday 10 September at 2.30pm at Chorlton Irish Club, Irish Mancunian presents The Great Hunger, featuring film, a book launch, and performance in song and spoken word. The Great Famine of 1845-52 was the most devastating event in the history of modern Ireland. In a country of eight million people, the Famine caused the death of at least one million, with around two million forced to emigrate; this at a time when Ireland was exporting vast quantities of corn, wheat, barley and other foodstuffs to Britain.
The film double bill is Famine in Ireland: Remember Skibbereen plus Ireland's Great Hunger; Michael Sheehan will launch his new book The Great Hunger in Manchester, which tells the tragic stories of Irish famine refugees in the city, and there will be readings of verbatim accounts of experiences of the Great Hunger.  Angela Durcan and Dominic Kane will round off the day with a selection of songs of the Famine and emigration.
Entry £8 in advance; £10 on the door.  
Advance tickets available athttp://www.wegottickets.com/event/410916.
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On Saturday 30 September, 10am to 4pm, the annual Salford Histories Festival takes place at Langworthy Cornerstones451 Liverpool Street, Salford M6 5QQ.  
Come and say hello to the volunteers on the Library stall!  
Other participants include Salford TUC, the Irwell Valley Mining Project, Elizabeth Gaskell's House and various local history societies.
Entry is free, and refreshments are available.

-----------------------------
And on Sunday 8 October at 3pm, at the same venue, Irish Mancunian will mark the 150th anniversary of the death of the Manchester Martyrs with a new play from Straightforward Theatre, Edward and Eliza and the Smashing of the Van.
The year is 1867. Edward Brett and his Irish wife, Eliza are struggling to make a living from their small shop. Edward’s brother, a popular policeman, is shot dead during the rescue of two Irish Republican prisoners in Manchester. A huge upsurge of anti-Irish feeling sweeps the country, and three Irishmen are publicly hanged. Edward and Eliza struggle to cope with their loss, their loyalty to each other and their different cultural backgrounds.
Written by Eileen Murphy, the play explores dilemmas that are still very relevant today.  It will be followed by a series of dramatic readings, interspersed with live music from Angela Durcan and Dominic Kane, featuring famous songs from the times.  
Entry £8 in advance; £10 on the door.  
Advance tickets available at http://www.wegottickets.com/event/414848.
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Labour Film Festival international contest
The Labour Film Festival (London & North West) has created a new format for its 2017 events, built around a  shorts and feature length film contest. The organisers are asking people to enter the contest with films that tell stories related to the world of work and of workers and their lives. 
There will be an opportunity to view the short-listed entries at the festivals (London & North West) which will be held in November this year.  The winners will be announced at a festival awards ceremony, also in November.
The contest is open until 20 October 2017.  The short films that will are awarded in all categories will be shared across the festival social media platforms and Web site.   
More details about how to enter here.
================
Mary Quaile Club  event 

(Organisers recommend early booking as they think it will be popular.)


Fighting Unemployment, Poverty  and Austerity
Saturday 30th September 2017,  1 p.m. to 4 p.m., Free

"Please note that our event on 30th September "Fighting poverty and austerity" will now start at 1pm, and not 2pm, as previously notified."

The Annexe, Working Class Movement Library, 51 Crescent, Salford M5 4WX.

Speakers: Sean Mitchell and Charlotte Hughes
Seán Mitchell will discuss his recently published  book, Struggle or Starve, Working Class Unity in Belfast's 1932 Outdoor Relief Riots (Haymarket Books).
In October 1932, the streets of Belfast were gripped by widespread rioting that lasted the best part of a week. Thousands of unarmed demonstrators fought extended pitched battles against heavily-armed police. Unemployed workers and, indeed, whole working-class communities, dug trenches and built barricades to hold off the police assault. The event became known as the Outdoor Relief Riot - one of very few instances in which class sympathy managed to cross the religious divide.
Struggle or Starve is the first book-length study of these events, and is based on archive research and first-hand accounts. Sean Mitchell is a founder member of People Before Profit, an all-Ireland socialist party.

Charlotte Hughes  is an activist in Tameside Against The Cuts which  for  four years has held a weekly picket outside the Job Centre in Ashton under Lyne, offering solidarity, advice and support to claimants. She writes a weekly blog about the picket, The Poor Side of Life, and is also a regular contributor to the Morning Star socialist  newspaper. In her talk she will speak from first hand experience of the war on the poor being waged by the Tory government.

The Mary Quaile Club - named in memory of Manchester trade unionist Mary Quaile -  organises regular events  on working class history and the links with contemporary political issues.
This event is  part of the Take Back Manchester Festival , organised by the People's Assembly.
Email: maryquaileclub@gmail.com

Afterword: How It Went -
A short account of the MQC event on "Fighting Unemployment, Poverty and Austerity" is now available at
https://maryquaileclub.wordpress.com/2017/10/02/mary-quaile-club-event-30th-september-2017/
-----------------------------
Also from/via MQC:-
Film screening  under auspices of NUJ Manchester & Salford branch:
September 9, 14:30 
at Three Minute Theatre, Affleck’s Arcade, Oldham Street, Manchester M1 1JG 
All welcome, you don’t have to be an NUJ member. Facebook event page for film 
--------------------------------------
Launch of Fair Press for Tenants
Thursday, September 14 at Media City,University of Salford, #B4 Salford Quays M50 2HE
---------------------------------------
Course on the history of radical women
Michael Herbert, one of the co-founders of the Mary Quaile club,  will be teaching a course on the history of  radical  women this autumn, starting on 10 October,  and running for 10 weeks. This will normally take place  between 11am and 1pm. The venue  will be the  Working Class Movement  Library, 51 Crescent, Salford M4 4WX. The cost of the course is £60.

The course will look at the history of radical  women from Mary Wollstonecraft, author of A Vindication of the Rights of Woman,  through to the  suffrage campaign. It will include women  in the radical movement  of the 1790s, Women and Luddism, Women at Peterloo, Women Republicans and atheists, Women in the early Co-operative movement, Women and Chartism, Women and trade unionism, and will finish with the story of the long struggle over 70 years for Votes for Women.

Michael is an historian and author of Up Then Brave Women; Manchester's Radical Women 1819-1918. He is a Trustee  of the Working Class Movement Library, and a member of Unite since 1983. 

This has proved to be a popular course in the past and early booking  is suggested. For more information about the course or to  book a place, please email Michael: redflagwalks@gmail.com
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Banner Theatre's new production Rise Like Lions!


In the wake of the huge success of Labour’s election campaign, which focused on hope and an end to austerity, Rise, Like Lions! weaves inspirational stories of workers in struggle with music, song and video.

The show exposes the 30-year plot to privatise the NHS and stages the fight to keep it in public hands. It dramatises the successful strikes of teaching support staff in Derby and Durham, and captures the spirit and defiance of the anti-fracking campaigners at the Preston New Road site in Lancashire.

With its thundering mix of folk, reggae and ska, Rise, Like Lions! brings you songs, stories and video scoops from the frontline of the class war. So, switch off the fake news and tune in to the real news from Banner Theatre!

Fantastic, empowering, goosebumps the whole time!” Anna Quick, NUT Student Member

"If Bertolt Brecht had had access to new technologies and keyboards, this is what he would have created. Great!” Senior Lecturer, Royal Holloway University

Audience members were absolutely entranced by the show. The conversation and debate sparked by the show lasted until closing time, and the bar was buzzing with people.” Ben Fletcher-Watson, Director, The Round, Newcastle


Facebook event on the Manchester Trades Council page
Donations from affiliates would be helpful to help cover costs.

From Organiser - Manchester Trades Union Council (via MQC mailing)
====================
 Wakefield Socialist History Group
 Saturday 16 September: GEORGE ORWELL AND SOCIALISM
PLEASE NOTE AMENDED DATE - previously noted as 9th, sorry
At the Red Shed, Vicarage Street, Wakefield WF1 1QX.  
Admission is free and free light snacks are provided. There is also a bar with excellent real ale. 

"..the ILP is the only British party -at any rate the only one large enough to be worth considering- which aims at anything I should regard as socialism" (Orwell, 1938) 
"..the real struggle (in Spain) is between revolution and counter-revolution; between workers who are vainly trying to hold on to a little of what they won in 1936 and the liberal-Communist bloc who are so successfully taking it away from them" (Orwell, 1937) 
"..everyone who uses his brain knows that Socialism, as a world-system and wholeheartedly applied, is a way out..Socialism is such elementary common sense that I am sometimes amazed that it has not established itself already" (Orwell, Road to Wigan Pier 1937).
 The speakers so far are:
*Brian Bamford (co-author of "The Boys on the Blacklist") who will be speaking on "Professor Preston and George Orwell: The Varietes of Historical Investigation and Experience"
*Alan Stewart (Convenor of Wakefield Socialist History Group) talking about "How George Orwell ended up in Barnsley!"
-------------------------

To come:

Wakefield Socialist History Group event, THE YORKSHIRE MINERS, is on Saturday 14 October 1pm at the Red Shed, Vicarage Street, Wakefield.

  • Ken Capstick will be the opening speaker.  He is former Vice President of the Yorkshire NUM.  He will be speaking about the "Curious Case of David Swallow."  David was born in East Ardsley, Wakefield.  He is credited with being the founder of the first national miners union and he played a leading role in the first national strike.
  • Huddersfield historian Alan Brooke (author of "Colliers and Hurriers: Working Conditions in Collieries Around Huddersfield") will also be speaking.  Again admission is free.
And on Saturday 11 November: THE BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION: ART AND REVOLUTION.

After the Event...
Brian Bamford's contribution to the event at the Red Shed
discussing George Orwell & Socialism:
"BECAUSE the subject of this talk is specifically about Orwell's socialism I ought to say what I won't be dealing with.  Orwell is such a vast subject, and he featured on Radio 4 only this week." 
For more go to www.northernvoicesmag.blogspot.com

-------------------------------------
Also at the Red Shed (Wakefield Labour Club)l, Vicarage Street, Wakefield WF1 1QX.
Saturday (7th October) 1.30pm 

Chris Nineham, Vice Chair of the Stop the War Coalition, will be talking about his new book 
HOW THE ESTABLISHMENT LOST CONTROL.
The event is organised by Counterfire and admission is free.  
(Chaired by Convenor of Wakefield Socialist History Group.)
=========================
Bishopsgate Institute
Near Liverpool Street Station; a few minutes walk, between Liverpool Street station and Spitalfields Market.
Bishopsgate Institute 
230 Bishopsgate 
London 
EC2M 4QH

 The East End - A Brief but Contentious History
Wednesday 4 October | 19:00 - 20:00
£9, £5 conc.
Professor John Marriott's illuminating talk questions the nature of the East End as an object of historical inquiry. Challenging the prevailing mythology of the area as a site of criminality and degeneration, he seeks to explore the interconnections among the origins, geographical boundaries and cultural landscape of East London.


Women's and Feminist History 1970 to Today
Wednesday 25 October | 18:30 - 21:00
Free, drop-in

Join us for an evening exploring women’s history as shown in the archives of Bishopsgate Institute at this free pop-up display. Find out more about grassroots protests, everyday women's lives, and the campaigns that have motivated women from the second wave of feminism in the 1970s to today.

=========================
Why Public History? 
The First Annual Conference of the Centre for Public History, 
Queen’s University Belfast
7-8 December 2017

In Autumn 2017 the School of History, Anthropology, Philosophy and Politics at Queen’s University Belfast is launching its new Centre for Public History. An interdisciplinary initiative, the Centre aims to provide a broad approach to the multi-faceted method of public history – in theory, application, and critique. This inaugural annual conference begins that task by seeking to assess the current state of the discipline. It asks a simple but vital question: in an age of ‘fake news’, ‘history wars’, and ‘impact agendas’, what role do scholars and practitioners have in shaping the relationship between the public and the place of the past?      

Reflective keynote lectures will be given by leading scholars in the field: Professor Ludmilla Jordanova (Durham University), Professor Peter Mandler (tbc) (University of Cambridge), and Professor Jock Phillips (University of Auckland).

We invite individual 20-minute papers, or panels of 3 papers, on these themes from any historical period or geographic locale, and encourage comparative work
Abstracts should not exceed 250 words, and should be accompanied by a short CV and sent to publichistory@qub.ac.uk by 1 September 2017. Notification of acceptance will be sent by 20 September 2017. To find out more about the event, please visit here
======================
Study Day in Amiens: Tuesday 26th September
Encountering the Other: 
Africans, Natives, Afro-Americans and Asiatics in Europe in the Great War
(Association of History and Geography Teachers)

LA RENCONTRE DE L’AUTRE : AFRICAINS, NATIVES, AFRO-AMÉRICAINS ET ASIATIQUES EN EUROPE DANS LA GRANDE GUERRE 
Mardi 26 septembre 2017
Lycée Jean de la Fontaine (Château-Thierry)
 Cette journée d’étude, proposée par l’association des professeurs d’histoire géographie (APHG), s’attache à étudier les bouleversements, notamment de perceptions, nés de la rencontre de l’« Autre » dans la Grande Guerre. Regard des soldats et travailleurs coloniaux sur la France, ou encore celui des troupes allemandes et alliées sur les Noirs, un large panel d’historiens et de spécialistes aborderont la question sous tous les angles. (Une thématique qui fait écho à la série Frères d’armes, diffusée pendant l'exposition qui accompagne l’événement.)
======================
Women's Peace Crusade film and HOUSMANS PEACE DIARY LAUNCH
Wed 4th October @ 7pm
Tickets are free - more information on the Houseman's website.

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


The Women's Peace Crusade 1917-1918’
with Alison Ronan Wednesday 4th October,7pm
Free Entry
------------------------------------------
Also at Housmans:
BOOK EVENT
‘How to Resist: Turn Protest to Power’
with Matthew Bolton
 in conversation with Wail Qasim
Wednesday 27th September,7pm


BLACK HISTORY MONTH
‘We're Queer And We Should Be Here: The perils and pleasures of being a gay football fan’
with Darryl Telles
Friday 6th October, 7pm
Free Entry
Peace News present:
‘1917: The Nonviolent Russian Revolution’ with Milan Rai 
Wednesday 25th October, 7pm
Entry £3, redeemable against any purchase. 
======================
Reminders
1917 conference
On Saturday 4 November at the Old Fire Station, Crescent, Salford M5 4NL (courtesy of the University of Salford) the Peace History Conference and the Library will present a day exploring the effect of the Russian Revolutions on the British labour and peace movements.  
The morning sessions consider the impact nationally and the afternoon covers, with talks, readings and film, the remarkable campaigns by women in the North West:
  • 'Way of Seeing: The Bolshevik Revolution and the British Left'. Prof John Callaghan
  • 'Against Imperialist War: Communists in the struggle for peace'. Dr Kate Hudson
  • 'Crusading Women in the North West'. Dr Alison Ronan
  • 'The Last Weapon: Theodora Wilson Wilson'. Maxine Peake (tbc) and Virginia Branney
Tickets £15 (£10 concessions) from peacehistoryconference2017.eventbrite.co.uk.
 ------------------------
Wigan Diggers' Festival
The annual Diggers' Festival takes place this year on Saturday 9 September from 11am to 9.30pm at The Wiend, Wigan.  The day commemorates Wigan-born Gerrard Winstanley and the 17th century Diggers movement, and includes free talks, music, poetry, film showings and over 50 food, book and campaign stalls.  Further information atwigandiggersfestival.org
 ------------------------

LSHG starting the term a little later than usual with the first seminar 
Monday 16th October, 5.30pm, Room 304 at the Institute of Historical Research, Malet St WC1.
John Rees will be speaking on his recent book The Leveller Revolution. 

See blog (linked) for new autumn newsletter.
 ------------------------
Liberating Arts Festival
Feature on the event from the Morning Star. http://www.morningstaronline.co.uk/a-09e9-Awakening-the-sleeping-giant-through-the-arts#.WeH4no9SyUk

========================
Round-up from PM Press:
Progressive Education Network in Boston, MA from October 5th to 7th
New England Art Book Fair in Providence, RI on October 6th and 7th
Teaching for Social Justice in San Francisco, CA on October 7th
Western Maryland Independent Lit Festival in Frostburg, MD on October 13th and 14th
Bouchercon in Toronto, ON from October 13th to 15th
Atlanta Radical Book Fair in Atlanta, GA on October 14th
Twin Cities Book Festival in Minneapolis, MN on October 14th and 15th
Vancouver Art Book Fair in Vancouver, BC on October 14th and 15th
Bioneers in San Rafael, CA from October 20th to 22nd
Northwest Teaching for Social Justice in Seattle, WA on October 21st
Trenton Punk Rock Flea Market in Trenton, NJ on October 22nd
Peace and Justice Studies Association in Birmingham, AL on October 26th
The FEST 16 in Gainesville, FL on October 27th
London Anarchist Book Fair in London, UK on October 28th

Los Angeles Anarchist Book Fair in Los Angeles, CA on October 28th and 29th