Free as Folk

organizing

#writing #organizing #revolution

me with some rad friends

I was thinking the other day about how things can change so massively, so quickly — and how we get used to monumental changes. And even in the midst of profound backsliding and reactionary violence, I have been inspired by Rebecca Solnit’s Hope in the Dark, originally published in 2004, but with ever-renewed relevance in our oft-darkened world.

…the more profound revolutions that had unfolded in our lifetimes, around race, gender, sexuality, food, economics, and so much more, the slow incremental victories that begin in the imagination and change the rules. But seeing those revolutions requires looking for something very different than armed cadres. It also requires being able to recognize the shades of gray between black and white or maybe to see the world in full color.

-Rebecca Solnit, Hope in the Dark

In this series, I’m going to walk through what I perceive as some of the major “social revolutions” of my brief 28 years on this planet.


Pretty much all of my examples have also been followed by backlashes, but that is to be expected. Dealing with the backlash for each one will probably look different from community to community, but I think it's important to note the shifts that have taken place, because they represent spaces of possibility.

source: my photo from Venice in 2019, artwork by Mœbius

Although I don't believe in teleological views of history or a linear idea of progress — or even the arc of the universe bending one way or another — I do believe that once the genie is out of the bottle, once an idea becomes a meme, it begins to reproduce itself, and it takes deliberate and sustained effort from the ruling classes to make people forget.

This is one reason people's history, labor history, women's history, pre-colonial anthropology are so heavily suppressed.

So I take these social revolutions not as “evidence of progress” per se, but as genies the ruling classes are desperately trying to shove back in their bottles. Will they succeed? Or will we manage to keep them free?

That remains up to us.

#organizing #HowTo #reading #books #writing

So my friends are often shocked when I tell them I read somewhere in the realm of 50-100 books a year.

a smattering of a few books I’m currently reading

  • So how do I read so much?
  • How do I find focus in this chaotic world?

In this short guide, I will share my method for reading any text, but especially challenging ones: academic or domain-specific books and articles.


I did not learn to do this in college, nor at any other point in my career. It’s a set of practices I’ve figured out through a lot of reading trials and tribulations, a lot of years of feeling frustrated and stupid — years which I hope to save you now:

1. Have a conversation with the book.

Don't assume the author is always right: even if you find their thesis convincing, it doesn't mean all of their arguments are sound. Some conversation starters:

  • Who is the author asking me to identify with?
  • Can I take their argument further? Or are they over-generalizing?
  • Can I think of edge cases where their argument doesn't apply?
  • Did they skip over something that feels important?

I like to annotate directly in the margins of whatever book I'm reading, either in pencil or using the comment feature of most e-readers.

If something really sparks my inspiration, I'll switch to a note app to expand on my thoughts. It’s fun when I jot down a question in the margins, then turn the page to find the author addressing my curiosity! (Though admittedly sometimes it is a frustrating conversation if I have serious ideological clashes with the writer, and they never address any of my objections XD)

2. Put ideas in conversation with each other.

This is a great way of practicing ambivalent thinking.

Whatever your background, you have expert knowledge in your own lived experience. You can and should use this as a way of exploring what you're reading.

  • How does this idea apply to my own life?
  • Do I have an experience that reinforces or challenges this idea?
  • Can I explain this idea more clearly?

As you read critically, you will gain wider background knowledge, which will unlock further understanding and engagement with what you read in the future.

A few of my (nerdy leftist theory) idea conversation starters might be: What would Hannah Arendt think about this? Is this an example of queer use? Is this author ignoring the entirety of indigenous philosophy? Is there a dialectic somewhere in here?

3. Read multiple books in parallel.

You will naturally find ideas that play with each other even on disparate topics, helping you cultivate a richer background knowledge, in turn allowing you to understand more complex ideas and writing.

I like to read across a broad range of genres. My current pie chart looks like this:

I could write whole essays on why I think each of these are important genres, but ultimately there's a core element of personal taste here. I would humbly suggest experimenting with books outside your usual wheelhouse a couple times a year though.

I also make a strong effort to read diverse authors, namely BIPOC and ABCD (Anyone But Cis Dudes) folks. This isn't to win diversity points or feel good about myself; genuinely the breadth and depth of marginalized knowledge blows my mind on a regular basis. Diverse authors just frequently write more interesting, challenging philosophy and fiction than most of what gets written from a dominant position in society.

4. Consider using an external memory aid.

I use the Anki app (free on desktop and Android, paid on iOS) to create flashcards for information I know I want to remember, like new words or historical facts! The app automates flashcard review based on memory research.

It’s super useful when I learn something new to immediately be able to go

“hm, was the printing press already invented when this movement started?” “wasn’t this during the Civil War?”

I spend ~10 minutes a night “studying.” I recommend making your own cards rather than using pre-built decks (which exist on a variety of topics) largely because it forces you to be intentional about what you want to remember.