CITY LIGHTS LIVE! Erin McElroy & Friends

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  • Опубликовано: 6 окт 2024
  • The Anti-Eviction Mapping Project, City Lights, and Duke University Press present
    Erin McElroy in conversation with Chris Carlsson, Manissa M. Maharawal, Toshio Meronek, and Lisa Rofel
    celebrating the publication of
    Silicon Valley Imperialism: Techno Fantasies and Frictions in Postsocialist Times
    By Erin McElroy
    Published by Duke University Press
    Purchase book at this link: citylights.com...
    In Silicon Valley Imperialism, Erin McElroy maps the processes of gentrification, racial dispossession, and economic predation that drove the development of Silicon Valley in the San Francisco Bay Area and how that logic has become manifest in postsocialist Romania. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork and archival research in Romania and the United States, McElroy exposes the mechanisms through which the appeal of Silicon Valley technocapitalism devours space and societies, displaces residents, and generates extreme income inequality in order to expand its reach. In Romania, dreams of privatization updated fascist and anti-Roma pasts and socialist-era underground computing practices. At the same time, McElroy accounts for the ways Romanians are resisting Silicon Valley capitalist logics, where anticapitalist and anti-imperialist activists and protesters build on socialist-era worldviews not to restore state socialism but rather to establish more just social formations. Attending to the violence of Silicon Valley imperialism, McElroy reveals technocapitalism as an ultimately unsustainable model of rapacious economic and geographic growth.
    Erin McElroy is Assistant Professor of Geography at the University of Washington and coeditor of Counterpoints: A San Francisco Bay Area Atlas of Displacement and Resistance.
    Chris Carlsson, is a writer, San Francisco historian, “professor,” bicyclist, tour guide, blogger, photographer, book and magazine designer. He has written four books (When Shells Crumble, Hidden San Francisco: A Guide to Lost Landscapes, Unsung Heroes, and Radical Histories; After the Deluge; Nowtopia) edited six books, (Reclaiming San Francisco, The Political Edge, Bad Attitude, Critical Mass: Bicycling’s Defiant Celebration, Ten Years That Shook the City: San Francisco, 1968-78 and Shift Happens! Critical Mass at 20), and co-authored the expanded second edition of Vanished Waters: The History of San Francisco’s Mission Bay. He helped co-found Critical Mass in September, 1992.
    Manissa M. Maharawal’s work has been published in Annals of the American Association of Geographers, Antipode, Sociological Quarterly, American Anthropologist, Anthropological Theory, Anthropological Quarterly, Abolition Journal, Radical Housing Journal, The Guardian, N+1, AlterNet among others. She is the author of the forthcoming book The Activist’s City: Social Movements, Structures of Feeling, and the Politics of Place. She is actively involved with the Anti-Eviction Mapping Project and recently co-edited the project’s first atlas: Counterpoints: A San Francisco Bay Area Atlas of Displacement & Resistance (PM Press 2021.) With Erin McElroy, she cofounded the oral history wing of the Anti-Eviction Mapping Project called the Narratives of Displacement and Resistance Project aimed to document urban change and resistance by foregrounding the stories of people who have been, or who are being, displaced.
    Toshio Meronek’s writing has appeared in Al Jazeera, The Nation, them, Truthout, Vice News, and more. They host the podcast Sad Francisco, and their book Miss Major Speaks is out now from Verso.
    Lisa Rofel is an anthropologist, specialising in feminist anthropology and gender studies. She received a B.A. from Brown University, followed by an M.A. and Ph.D. from Stanford University, and is professor emeritus in the anthropology department at the University of California, Santa Cruz. Rofel’s publications include Desiring China: Experiments in Neoliberalism, Sexuality, and Public Culture, and Other Modernities: Gendered Yearnings in China after Socialism.
    This event was originally broadcast on Wednesday, July 17, 2024.
    Made possible by support from the City Lights Foundation.

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