Ten Years That Shook the City

Ten Years That Shook the City

Author: Chris Carlsson

Publisher: City Lights Books

Published: 2011-06

Total Pages: 346

ISBN-13: 1931404127

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The alliances, programs, and goals of a historic decade that continues to shape SF and the world.


Ten Years That Shook the City

Ten Years That Shook the City

Author: Chris Carlsson

Publisher: City Lights Publishers

Published: 2011-06-01

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781931404129

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The alliances, programs, and goals of a historic decade that continues to shape SF and the world.


Shift Happens!

Shift Happens!

Author: Chris Carlsson

Publisher:

Published: 2012

Total Pages: 320

ISBN-13: 9780926664081

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A new anthology celebrating the accomplishments of the Critical Mass movement over the past twenty years. From both theoretical and practical perspectives, the book explores how Critical Mass has gone around the world, how it has evolved along the way, and the impacts it has had on local politics, transportation, and cultures. Includes contributions from San Francisco, Paris, Chicago, Los Angeles, Puerto Elegre, Manchester, Madrid, Buenos Aires, Rome, São Paulo, A Coruña, Guadalajara, Nuevo León, Budapest, Prague, Helsinki, Ponce, Mexico City, Bilbao, Baton Rouge, Capetown, Vigo, Naples, New York City, Portland, London, Berkeley, Florianopolis, Calais, Dubai, and Palestine!


Critical Mass

Critical Mass

Author: Chris Carlsson

Publisher: AK Press

Published: 2002

Total Pages: 260

ISBN-13: 9781902593593

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Documenting 10 years of fun, radical, spontaneous bicycle demonstrations that challenge the autocentric world.


Ten Years Later

Ten Years Later

Author: Hoda Kotb

Publisher: Simon and Schuster

Published: 2014-02-04

Total Pages: 240

ISBN-13: 1451656041

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"New York Times"-bestselling author and beloved "Today" show co-anchor tells the incredible stories of people who, when faced with impossibly challenging or tragic life situations, persevere--and even thrive.


Cult City

Cult City

Author: Daniel J. Flynn

Publisher: Open Road Media

Published: 2018-10-16

Total Pages: 331

ISBN-13: 1504056760

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In recounting the fascinating, intersecting stories of Jim Jones and Harvey Milk, Cult City tells the story of a great city gone horribly wrong. November 1978. Reverend Jim Jones, the darling of the San Francisco political establishment, orchestrates the murders and suicides of 918 people at a remote jungle outpost in South America. Days later, Harvey Milk, one of America’s first openly gay elected officials—and one of Jim Jones’s most vocal supporters—is assassinated in San Francisco’s City Hall. This horrifying sequence of events shocked the world. Almost immediately, the lives and deaths of Jim Jones and Harvey Milk became shrouded in myth. Now, forty years later, this book corrects the record. The product of a decade of research, including extensive archival work and dozens of exclusive interviews, Cult City reveals just how confused our understanding has become. In life, Jim Jones enjoyed the support of prominent politicians and Hollywood stars even as he preached atheism and communism from the pulpit; in death, he transformed into a fringe figure, a “fundamentalist Christian” and a “fascist.” In life, Harvey Milk faked hate crimes, outed friends, and falsely claimed that the US Navy dishonorably discharged him over his homosexuality; in death, he is honored in an Oscar-winning movie, with a California state holiday, and a US Navy ship named after him. His assassin, a blue-collar Democrat who often voted with Milk in support of gay issues, is remembered as a right-winger and a homophobe. But the story extends far beyond Jones and Milk. Author Daniel J. Flynn vividly portrays the strange intersection of mainstream politics and murderous extremism in 1970s San Francisco—the hangover after the high of the Summer of Love.


Nowtopia

Nowtopia

Author: Chris Carlsson

Publisher:

Published: 2008

Total Pages: 296

ISBN-13:

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Working people are taking back their time and technological know-how from the deadening jobs in small, under-the-radar ways, making life better right now. They reclaim the streets at Critical Mass cycle rides; they reclaim the urban landscape with guerrilla gardening and make common cause in virtual worlds with networks, freeware and hacking. This is a discourse on work, on what we do to make it bearable and the creativity of all those people who subvert the normal order of things. The DIY future is now.


Ten Days in Physics that Shook the World

Ten Days in Physics that Shook the World

Author: Brian Clegg

Publisher: Icon Books

Published: 2021-08-05

Total Pages: 214

ISBN-13: 1785787489

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The breakthroughs that have had the most transformative practical impacts, from thermodynamics to the Internet. Physics informs our understanding of how the world works – but more than that, key breakthroughs in physics have transformed everyday life. We journey back to ten separate days in history to understand how particular breakthroughs were achieved, meet the individuals responsible and see how each breakthrough has influenced our lives. It is a unique selection. Focusing on practical impact means there is no room for Stephen Hawking's work on black holes, or the discovery of the Higgs boson. Instead we have the relatively little-known Rudolf Clausius (thermodynamics) and Heike Kamerlingh Onnes (superconductivity), while Albert Einstein is included not for his theories of relativity but for the short paper that gave us E=mc2 (nuclear fission). Later chapters feature transistors, LEDs and the Internet.


Bad Attitude

Bad Attitude

Author: Chris Carlsson

Publisher: Verso

Published: 1990-07-17

Total Pages: 292

ISBN-13: 0860919463

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Bad Attitude is a collection of writings and graphics from the extraordinary Processed Word magazine. Dedicated it giving voice to the benumbed foot-soldiers of the information age it contains blistering first-hand accounts of life at the bottom of the ladder in big banks, defense contractors, computer manufacturers and food processing factories. In these pages the service economy and the new high tech jobs often touted in glowing terms by the mainstream media are exposed for their quotidian banality, their essential uselessness, and the catch-22 absurdity that permeates all corporate life under late capitalism. Moving at bike messenger speed between offices, Bad Attitude describes the hazards of the office computer and how to sabotage it, mutant culture in Silicon Valley, the new transiency undercutting links at work, the connections between time and money, bosses and secretaries, resistance and resignation. It provides a unique basis for new theoretical developments in the struggle for human liberation, and, above all, it assures the thousands of isolated rebels mired in dead-end and deadening jobs that they are not alone. The spark of revolt can and must be nurtured until the next wave comes along.