by kspence | Sep 28, 2012 | Imaging the City, Neoliberalism, The Future of the City
Of the videos from MODCAR’s Imaging Detroit project I’ve seen so far, this is one of the most frustrating. But at the same time it was just good enough to provide inspiration for an essay I’m working on for Nobody’s Coming....
by kspence | Sep 26, 2012 | Class and Politics, Neoliberalism, Sports |
But of course that’s not the real story. Why are the original refs being replaced in the first place? The struggle between the owners and the referees is part and parcel of a much larger series of struggles between labor and capital. In this case, the two...
by kspence | Sep 25, 2012 | Neoliberalism |
On February 26, 2012, George Zimmerman (a self-appointed neighborhood watchman) shot and killed Trayvon Martin, a black teenager in a gated community in Sanford, Florida, while the teenager walked from the grocery store to his father’s girlfriend’s house. According to...
by kspence | Sep 21, 2012 | Neoliberalism, The Future of the City
Imaging Detroit occurs this weekend, featuring over 65 films (including my first film short “I Am From Detroit”). Over the next several weeks I plan on featuring these films here. I’m struck by Lemonade Detroit for a few reasons, but the first is...
by kspence | Sep 19, 2012 | Neoliberalism, Urban Politics
Part of the Imaging Detroit installation, created with Kofi Boone, Associate Professor of Landscape Architecture at North Carolina State University. [youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XV4X_rZx-pM[/youtube]
by kspence | Sep 18, 2012 | Black Politics, Knocking the Hustle, Neoliberalism |
If I were asked in all seriousness just what I considered to be the chief significance of Invisible Man as a fiction, I would reply: Its experimental attitude and its attempt to return to the mood of personal moral responsibility for democracy which typified...
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