The Abusable Past
  • About
  • The Abusable Past
  • What We’re Reading
    • Microsyllabus
    • Author Interviews
    • Conversations in Black Freedom Studies (CBFS)
  • Executive Dis/Order
    • Call for Submissions
    • Lesson Plans
  • Forums
    • People’s University for Gaza
      • Forum 7.0 // People’s University for Gaza, Introduction
      • Forum 7.1 // Campus Circulation & Noncirculation: Fall 2024
      • Forum 7.2 // The New Age of McCarthyism: The Challenges of Teaching About Palestine in a Post-October 7th World 
      • Forum 7.3 // Teaching The Question of Palestine: Interdisciplinary Considerations 
      • Forum 7.4 // UCSC People’s U Reflections on Kinship, Community, and Care
      • Forum 7.5 // Making Meaning of What We’ve Lost:  Collective Grief, Community, and Campus Crackdowns in the Wake of the Encampment Movement  
      • Forum 7.6 // What My College’s Palestine Encampment Taught Me About Love 
      • Forum 7.7 // Solidarity until Liberation against the Militarized University
      • Forum 7.8 // From New York Liberation School to Intifada University
      • Forum 7.9 // From Central America to Palestine:The importance of solidarity and global connections The People’s University
      • Forum 7.10 // Sustaining Dialogue
    • On Peer Review
      • Forum 1.1 // On Peer Review, Introduction
      • Forum 1.2 // On Peer Review, by Marissa J. Moorman (Radical History Review)
      • Forum 1.3 // On Peer Review, by Rocío Zambrana (Hypatia: A Journal of Feminist Philosophy)
      • Forum 1.4 // On Peer Review, by Andrew Dilts (Abolition Journal Collective)
      • Forum 1.5 // The Precarity of Peer Review, by Eli Thorkelson (precarious ethnographer)
    • Mauna Kea
      • Forum 2 // Enduring Hawaiian Sovereignty : Protecting the Sacred at Mauna Kea, Introduction by J. Kehaulani Kauanui
      • Forum 2.1 // For Mauna Kea to Live, TMT Must Leave, by David Uahikeaikalei‘ohu Maile
      • Forum 2.2 // In Ceremony and Struggle: The Lāhui at Puʻuhonua o Puʻuhuluhulu, by Iokepa Casumbal-Salazar
      • Forum 2.3 // Stop TMT: Bearing Witness to the Decolonial Change the World Has Long Needed, by Dean Itsuji Saranillio
      • Forum 2.4 // Ke Mau Nei Nō Ke Ea O Ka ʻĀina I Ka Pono, by Noenoe K. Silva
    • The Border is the Crisis
      • Forum 3.1 // Four Things You Need to Know About the Border by Lisa Sun-Hee Park
      • Forum 3.2 // The Racist, Sexist, Classist, and Homophobic Past of the “Public Charge” Clause by Julio Capó, Jr.
      • Forum 3.3 // On Common Ground: Concentration Camps in the ‘Home of the Free’ at the Southwest Border and in History by Hana C. Maruyama
      • Forum 3.4 // ‘3 Mexican Countries’: When All Latin American Migrants Become Mexicans by David Hernández
      • Forum 3.5 // #Microsyllabus: Immigration Enforcement and the U.S.-Mexico Border
    • From Carr to Classroom
      • Forum 4 // From Carr to Classroom : Pursuing Historical Knowledge in the Shadow of the Confederacy
      • Forum 4.1 // Where do we study history?
      • Forum 4.2 // Carr, the Confederacy, and Conversations Ongoing
      • Forum 4.3 // Renaming the Carr Building and its Role in the Discussion of Race-Based Issues
      • Forum 4.4 // Confessions of a White Moderate
      • Forum 4.5 // The Past is for the Living
    • White Terror, “Red” Island: A People’s Archive of the Jeju 4.3 Uprising and Massacre
      • Forum 5.2 // Literature of Memory Struggle
      • Forum 5.3 // Reiterations of Dissent
      • Forum 5.4 // Early Cold War Genocide: The Jeju 4.3 Massacre and U.S. Responsibility
      • Forum 5.5 // Silent Wounds of Jeju 4.3
      • Forum 5.6 // “So Many Stories You Never Heard”: An Inheritance of Loss (an interview with Dohee Lee)
      • Forum 5.7 // Over 5,000 Days of Resistance: An Interview with Anti-base Activist Choi Sung-hee on the Gangjeong and Jeju Struggle for Peace
      • Forum 5.8// Sangsuwon (The Origin of Water), HOBAK Jeju Solidarity zine #1
    • Campus Policing
      • Forum 6.1 // Abolitionist Study and Struggle in and beyond the University
      • Forum 6.2 // Who Polices the Campus? The Relationship between Administrators and Campus Police
      • Forum 6.3 // No Guns, No Cops, No Code: the 1980s Anti-Deputization Movement at the University of Michigan
      • Forum 6.4 // The Local as Problem: A Berkeley Story
      • Forum 6.5 // Abolition, Universities, and the American Right
      • Forum 6.6 // Against Naïve Autonomy: Critiquing the Policing of South African University Campuses
      • Forum 6.7 // Scaling Up and Building Solidarity: A Conversation with Organizers from the Cops Off Campus Coalition
      • Forum 6.8 // Art: Praxis & Power
  • Doing Radical History
  • Addendum
    • Call for Submissions
      • CFP: Radical History Review issue on Mobility Regimes
  • Radical History Review

Month: September 2020

Image courtesy of the Race and Oral History Project. Doing Radical History

Teaching “Race and Oral History in San Diego” During COVID-19: Rethinking Community, Storytelling, and Labor

September 30, 2020 0

by Yến Lê Espiritu, Adriana Echeverria, Youngoh Jung, Simeon Man Community Engagement and the Neoliberal University: A Departure As faculty and graduate student workers of color in Ethnic…

A Palestinian youth placed a flag on the Israeli Separation Wall during a protest marking nine years for the struggle against the wall in the West Bank village of Bil’in, February 28, 2014. (Photo by Oren Ziv/GroundTruth) The Abusable Past

“The Agreement of Colonial Thieves”: The Infrastructure of Annexation in Occupied Palestine

September 15, 2020 0

by Chandni Desai Plans for de jure annexation of Palestinian lands have emerged at a time when the world is battling against one of the…

Growing Barn// Photograph copyright and by courtesy of Sean Sprague. All rights reserved. Author Interviews

Working Pigs and Humans in the Age of Covid-19

September 4, 2020 0

A Conversation between Alex Blanchette and Gabriel N. Rosenberg All photographs copyright and by courtesy of Sean Sprague. All rights reserved. Alex Blanchette is an associate…

Three soldiers stand in the foreground of a green, grassy field. A helicopter looms in the background, two soldiers beside it, pink aerosol spray emanating just beyond. The Abusable Past

Military Service as Liberal Policing: A Brief Racial History of Project 100,000

September 2, 2020 0

Tamara K. Nopper On August 23, 1966, Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara delivered a speech at the annual convention of the Veterans of Foreign…

Recent Posts

  • Political Rage, Feminist Anger
  • The Fight for Black Education and Black History: An Interview with Brian Jones, Jesse Hagopian, Crystal Sanders, Barry Goldenberg, and Lucien Baskin
  • Imperial Mobilities, Geographical Imaginaries: A Conversation Between Javier Arbona-Homar and Emily Mitchell-Eaton
  • Malcolm X at 100
  • Carceral Quarantine
  • Record of Transfer
  • Call for Submissions: The Executive Dis/Order Project
  • Policing Solidarity: Lessons from the Drug War

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  • White Terror, “Red” Island: A People’s Archive of the Jeju 4.3 Uprising and Massacre

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The Abusable Past complements Radical History Review with unique and original content related to the praxis of radical history in this social and political moment.

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