Workers in a time of War:
Pakistan and the Crisis of the Labour Movement
Sunday, December 2, 2:00 PM | Â International House
(1414 E. 59th Street, Chicago IL)
A Discussion with
Gulzar Ahmed Chaudhary
General Secretary, All Pakistan Trade Union Federation
Rubina Jamil
President, Working Women Organization
Yasir Gulzar
President, Progressive Youth Organization
Atiya Khan
Platypus, Phd candidate at the University of Chicago
A demonstration in Lahore, 2008, led by the Labour Party Pakistan.
A moderated panel discussion and audience Q&A bringing together three leading figures of the Pakistani labor movement to talk about workers rights, womenâs rights, the struggle to organize in the shadow of the Taliban, and the impact of the ongoing war in Afghanistan on the workers of Pakistan. These topics will be explored in light of the increasingly pressing need to reconstitute an international Left.
For background reading, see The Failure of Pakistan: A Concise History of the Left.
Also checkout the event on Facebook, and the flier.
Co-sponsored by the International House Global Voices Lecture Program and the Center for International Studies.
No Admission fee. Free and open to the public. Persons with disabilities that may need assistance should contact the Office of Programs & External Relations in advance of the program at 773-753-2274.
Friday, January 23rd, 2009
6:30pm
New York University Sociology Department
Puck Building
295 Lafayette st. 4th FL
New York, NY 10012
North Side Reading Group |Â Loyola University
Week 1. What is the Left? |Â Jan. 25, 2009
"The concept of the Left remains unclear to this day." (Kolakowski 1968)
â˘Â Leszek Kolakowski, "The Concept of the Left" (1968)
[in Carl Oglesby, ed., New Left Reader (1969), 144-158]
Week 2. Marxism as theory and practice: the 1920s-30s "Old" Left |Â Feb. 1, 2009
"In socialism, freedom is to become a reality. But because the present system is called 'free' and considered liberal, it is not terribly clear what this might mean. . . . Not only [the Little Man's] lack of freedom but that of [his betters] as well spells his doom. His interest lies in the Marxist clarification of the concept of freedom. . . .
The socialist order of society is not prevented by world history; it is historically possible. But it will not be realized by a logic that is immanent to history but by men trained in theory and determined to make things better. Otherwise, it will not be realized at all." (Horkheimer 1926-31)
â˘Â Max Horkheimer, selections from Dämmerung (Notes 1926-31)
â˘Â Theodor W. Adorno, part X. "Imaginative excesses" from "Messages in a Bottle" (orphaned from Minima Moralia 1944-47)
â˘Â Liza Featherstone, Doug Henwood, and Christian Parenti, " 'Action Will Be Taken': Left Anti-Intellectualism and its Discontents" (2002)
â˘Â Esther Leslie, Introduction to the 1969 Adorno-Marcuse correspondence (1999)
â˘Â Theodor W. Adorno and Herbert Marcuse, correspondence on the German New Left (1969)
Week 3. February 8, 2009
â˘Â Richard Fraser, Two Lectures on the Black Question in America and Revolutionary Integrationism (1953)
â˘Â James Robertson and Shirley Stoute, "For Black Trotskyism" (1963)
â˘Â Bayard Rustin, "The Failure of Black Separatism" (1970)
Week 4. Feb. 15, 2009
â˘Â Juliet Mitchell, "Women: the Longest Revolution" (1966)
[revised version from Women's Estate (1971)]
â˘Â John D'Emilio, "Capitalism and Gay Identity" (1983)
Week 5. Feb. 22, 2009
â˘Â Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, selections from the Manifesto of the Communist Party (1847-48, Prefaces to various language editions, I. "Bourgeois and Proletarians," II. "Proletarians and Communists," and IV. "Position of the Communists in Relation to the Various Existing Opposition Parties" [PDF])
[in Robert C. Tucker, ed., Marx-Engels Reader, 469-491, and 499-500]
â˘Â Karl Marx, selections from the Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844 ("Estranged Labour," "Private Property and Labour," "Private Property and Communism," and "The Meaning of Human Requirements" [PDF])
[in Robert C. Tucker, ed., Marx-Engels Reader, 70-101]
Week 6. Mar. 1, 2009
"The most important Marxian political manifesto remains to be written." (Nicolaus 1968)
â˘Â Martin Nicolaus, "The Unknown Marx" (1968)
[also in Carl Oglesby, ed., The New Left Reader (1969), 84-110]
â˘Â Moishe Postone, "Rethinking Marx (in a post-Marxist world)" (1995)
Week 7. Mar. 15, 2009
â˘Â Georg LukĂÂĄcs, "The Phenomenon of Reification" (Part I of "Reification and the Consciousness of the Proletariat," 1923) [PDF]
[in History and Class Consciousness, 83-110]
Week 8. Mar. 29, 2009
"Qui si convien lasciare ogni sospetto;
Ogni viltĂÂ convien che qui sia morta
[Here all mistrust must be abandoned;
And here must perish every craven thought]"
(Dante Alighieri, Divina Commedia 1308-21 quoted by Marx 1859)
â˘Â Karl Korsch, Introduction to Marx's Critique of the Gotha Programme (1922)
â˘Â Karl Marx, Critique of the Gotha Programme (1875)
[also in Tucker, ed., Marx-Engels Reader, 525-541]
â˘Â Karl Marx, Preface to A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy (1859)
[also in Robert Tucker, ed., Marx-Engels Reader, 3-6]
Week 9. Apr. 19th, 2009
â˘Â Leon Trotsky: Trade Unions in the Epoch of Imperialist Decay
â˘Â Christopher L Tomlins, The State and the Unions: Labor Relations, Law and the Organized Labor Movements in America 1880-1960, 282-329

