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Welcome to Episode 182 of Pelo Buddy TV, an unofficial Peloton podcast & Peloton news show. This week we cover the following topics: The last classes for Kendall Toole, Kristin McGee, and Ross Rayburn took place this week. There are now some “Greatest Hits” class collections highlighting a few of the best classes from Ross, Kendall, and Kristin. Mayla Wedekind is back from maternity leave and other highlights from the week in “This Week at Peloton” There will be no live classes from July 3 – 7, for the 4th of July Holiday. There will be artist series featuring Jack Antonoff and Anitta in July. Robin Arzon recorded a “Taylor Swift: Tortured Poets Department” ride this week. A Lil Jon artist series took place, and Lil Jon was at PSNY for two of the classes. Jess King's Sweat Steady series is coming to the Tread. Peloton has teamed up with the WNBA to highlight some Pride class picks. The first Live DJ class from London took place with some unique production aspects. The “Strength for Runners” filter is now “Strength for Sport” Amazon's Prime Day sale in July will feature some discounts on Peloton hardware & accessories. New members can get a deep discount on the Peloton app for two months. There was a new release of Peloton x Spiritual Gangster Apparel this week. Happy Birthday to Andy Speer, Denis Morton, and Katie Wang. Jess Sims helped raise money for the Dunkin' Joy in Childhood Foundation. Mariana Fernandez placed second in a triathlon. Tunde Oyeneyin was named to the 2024 BET Culture Class. Tunde Oyeneyin was in France for a Vogue event. Matt Wilpers is supporting and fundraising for Shriners Hospitals for Children Cody Rigsby helped open a new fitness center at the Ocean Casino. Cody Rigsby went to a pride event at the White House. Logan Aldridge shared it has been 20 years since he lost his arm. Jenn Sherman was on the Dear FoundHer podcast. Chris & John share their, and the community's, class picks of the week. Enjoy the show? Become a Pelo Buddy TV Supporter! Find details here: https://www.pelobuddy.com/membership-account/membership-levels/ You can find links to full articles on each of these topics from the episode page here: https://www.pelobuddy.com/pelo-buddy-tv-episode-182/ The show is also available via YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/PeloBuddy This episode is hosted by Chris Lewis (#PeloBuddy) & John Prewitt (#Kenny_Bania).
Medaya Ocher and Eric Newman speak to Rachel Nuwer about her recent book, I Feel Love: MDMA and the Quest for Connection in a Fractured World. They discuss the drug's emergence in the Bay Area during the 1960s when pioneers hailed it as a groundbreaking mental health therapy for treating everything from addiction to trauma before the US government classified it as a dangerous Schedule I drug. Eric, Medaya, and Rachel also discuss MDMA's surge in popularity as a party drug during the 1980s and 1990s, as well as inclusion in new clinical trials currently underway to research its effectiveness in treating severe cases of PTSD. Across her account of MDMA's past, present, and future, Nuwer's accessible journalistic account informs and challenges what we know about how the drug works and how the government, researchers, and underground renegades have shaped the scientific and cultural discourse that surrounds it. Also, Kristin Ross, the author of The Politics and Poetics of Everyday Life returns to recommend a range of works that capture and comment on everyday life: Wayward Lives, Beautiful Experiments by Saidaya Hartman, the writing of Mike Davis and Fredric Jamison on Los Angeles, the noir novels of Raymond Chandler and Ross MacDonald set in Sothern California, the detective novels (and even-darker fictions) of George Simenon, and the historical novels of Janet Lewis, including The Wife of Martin Guerre.
Medaya Ocher and Eric Newman speak to Rachel Nuwer about her recent book, I Feel Love: MDMA and the Quest for Connection in a Fractured World. They discuss the drug's emergence in the Bay Area during the 1960s when pioneers hailed it as a groundbreaking mental health therapy for treating everything from addiction to trauma before the US government classified it as a dangerous Schedule I drug. Eric, Medaya, and Rachel also discuss MDMA's surge in popularity as a party drug during the 1980s and 1990s, as well as inclusion in new clinical trials currently underway to research its effectiveness in treating severe cases of PTSD. Across her account of MDMA's past, present, and future, Nuwer's accessible journalistic account informs and challenges what we know about how the drug works and how the government, researchers, and underground renegades have shaped the scientific and cultural discourse that surrounds it. Also, Kristin Ross, the author of The Politics and Poetics of Everyday Life returns to recommend a range of works that capture and comment on everyday life: Wayward Lives, Beautiful Experiments by Saidaya Hartman, the writing of Mike Davis and Fredric Jamison on Los Angeles, the noir novels of Raymond Chandler and Ross MacDonald set in Sothern California, the detective novels (and even-darker fictions) of George Simenon, and the historical novels of Janet Lewis, including The Wife of Martin Guerre.
Pour la première fois épisode enregistré en public et en extérieur au parc Pompidou à Grenoble dans le cadre de la biennale des villes en transition 2023.Merci aux équipes de la biennale pour la prise de son. Lecture d'extrait du livre "on ne dissout pas un soulèvement." 40 voix pour les soulèvements de la terre : Geneviève Azam, Jérôme Baschet, Aurélien Berlan, Blue Monk, Christophe Bonneuil, Isabelle Cambourakis, Confédération paysanne, Alain Damasio, Des cantinières et cantiniers de l'Ouest, Philippe Descola, Virginie Despentes, Alix F., Malcom Ferdinand, David Gé Bartoli, Sophie Gosselin, Florence Habets, Lea Hobson, Celia Izoard, François Jarrige, Léna Lazare, Julien Le Guet, Cy Lecerf Maulpoix, Martine Luterre, Marcelle et Marcel, Virginie Maris, Tanguy Martin, Gaïa Marx, Baptiste Morizot, Naturalistes des Terres, Kassim Niamanouch, Lotta Nouqui, Alessandro Pignocchi, Geneviève Pruvost, Kristin Ross, Scientifiques en rébellion, Isabelle Stengers, Françoise Vergès, Eduardo Viveiros de Castro, Terra Zassoulitch et des dizaines d'organisations internationales. On ne dissout pas un dérèglement planétaire. On n'efface pas par décret les constats scientifiques ni le refus d'un capitalisme radicalisé fonçant dans le mur. Loin des procès en « écoterrorisme », ce qui se joue autour des mouvements comme les Soulèvements de la Terre n'est rien d'autre que la bataille de ce siècle. Bonne écoute. Merci d'écouter le podcast BigBooks, n'hésitez pas à le partager, à rédiger un commentaire, à mettre des étoiles ou à vous abonner. Retrouvons-nous sur Facebook, Instagram, Twitter ou Youtube. Texte et Voix : Audrey Vernon Réalisation : Virgile Lorach / Chlorine Free Production : Jean-Patrick Labouyrie / Podmust
Eric Newman and Kate Wolf speak to the author Kristin Ross about her recent book, The Politics and Poetics of Everyday Life, a collection of essays that examine how everyday life emerges as a vantage point for understanding and transforming our social world. The book represents three decades of Ross's writing about the everyday in French political, social, and cultural theory and history, including the commune form and current autonomous zones in France, the romance and memory of the May 1968 protests, and the present predicaments both faced and created by the Macron government. Featuring a long interview with the pioneering philosopher Henri Lefebvre, the book also invokes the work of Frederic Jameson, Jacques Ranciere, Emile Zola, and many others, to explore the intersections of political transformation and cultural representation as resources for thinking opposition and liberation in the present. Plus, artist Martine Syms, whose new exhibition Loser Back Home is currently on view at Spruth Magers in Los Angeles, returns to recommend Steffani Jemison's novel A Rock, A River, A Street.
Eric Newman and Kate Wolf speak to the author Kristin Ross about her recent book, The Politics and Poetics of Everyday Life, a collection of essays that examine how everyday life emerges as a vantage point for understanding and transforming our social world. The book represents three decades of Ross's writing about the everyday in French political, social, and cultural theory and history, including the commune form and current autonomous zones in France, the romance and memory of the May 1968 protests, and the present predicaments both faced and created by the Macron government. Featuring a long interview with the pioneering philosopher Henri Lefebvre, the book also invokes the work of Frederic Jameson, Jacques Ranciere, Emile Zola, and many others, to explore the intersections of political transformation and cultural representation as resources for thinking opposition and liberation in the present. Plus, artist Martine Syms, whose new exhibition Loser Back Home is currently on view at Spruth Magers in Los Angeles, returns to recommend Steffani Jemison's novel A Rock, A River, A Street.
Dr Kristin Ross shares so much valuable insight as a childhood cancer survivor and as a Marriage and Family Therapist who specializes in Medical Family Therapy! You can learn more about her through visiting her website: www.cardinalcounselingwellnessgroup.com Don't forget to join our FB community here! Do you have PTSD after a diagnosis? Click here to take a 20 question quiz! Join our Mental Health Provider list here Please rate this podcast!
We finish off talking about our anticipated reads of May to August 2023, and bid farewell to Mark, one of our dear book friends. Thank you, Mark, for all your thought-provoking book recommendations in the past year. We will try to carry the torch by raising awareness of lesser known, translated works from around the world. Books mentioned on this episode: Vampires of El Norte by Isabel Cañas, Ink Blood Sister Scribe by Emma Törzs, The Politics and Poetics of Everyday Life by Kristin Ross, Oh God, The Sun Goes by David Connor, Days at the Morisaki Bookshop by Satoshi Yagisawa, translated by Eric Ozawa, The Maniac by Benjamín Labatut, Kappa by Ryūnosuke Akutagawa, translated by Lisa Hoffman-Kuroda and Allison Markin Powell, The Forest Brims Over by Maru Ayase, translated by Haydn Trowell, Honeybees and Distant Thunder by Riku Onda, translated by Philip Gabriel, and Mild Vertigo by Mieko Kanai, translated by Polly Barton. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/keepitfictional/message
This month on Partisan Gardens, we are sharing a presentation by Kristin Ross, author of the landmark book “Communal Luxury: the Political Imaginary of the Paris Commune.” She delivered the lecture to the 2019 Antipode American Association of Geographers Lecture in Washington DC and gave another version of the talk here in Bloomington that same...
"Luxe communal": Ein Leben in Fülle für alle - ohne kapitalistische Ausbeutung, ohne Staa t, ohne Nation. Kristin Ross beleuchtet in einem augenöffnenden Essay die revolutionären Ideen der Pariser Kommune. Rezension von Roman Kaiser-Mühlecker. Verlag Matthes und Seitz, 204 Seiten, 20 Euro ISBN 978-3-75180-324-3
Gawkward is a little different this week. Host Kelsey Pribilski and her pal Mabel chat with Dr. Kristin Ross about how they're coping with the pandemic and come up with ways to help combat quarantine-fatigue. Kelsey also addresses an event that happened a couple months ago pertaining to a WWE wrestler and gives an update on that situation.Link to Kristin & Taylor Ross' GoFundMe for IVF:https://www.gofundme.com/f/help-kristin-and-taylor-start-a-family?sharetype=teams&member=6957598&utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook&utm_campaign=p_na%20share-sheet&rcid=fdb1b54195d9428ea351e8b2f4fb883f&fbclid=IwAR1_g-RHetj9cc-qWaI5BZoU4AHeGaeWlT6kj_9xh1vTdimt0VteUG9jsU4Produced, Shot & Edited By: Kelsey Pribilski Instagram: @gawkwardpod @kelseypribilski Email: gawkwardpodcast@gmail.comFacebook: Gawkward PodcastMusic By: Heath Allyn @heathallynSound Mixing By: Dave Novak @davetothenovakWebsite: Gawkwardpodcast.com
In today's episode I speak with sexologist Kristin Ross about what makes sex meaningful. The role od society in our relationship with our sexuality, how to deal with shame, trauma and all the messy and lovely things sex has to offer. Please enjoy this episode courtesy of Sekhmet.caKristin Ross: IG @Krystin.rossTheo: Sekhmet.ca Patreon.com/midnightmeditations
Kristin Ross (Ngāti Kahu, Ngāti Tara) is an entrepreneur, a producer and a creative. If you have tamariki, you will likely know her best as the co-founder and co-creator (with her husband Hōhepa) of the first Māori speaking dolls, and associated cartoon, Pipi Mā. Kristin and her husband produce Māori language content for digital and television broadcast, and while te reo Māori is now the primary language in their home, it wasn’t something she grew up with. In this episode we talk about being unapologetically Māori. Kristin’s passion for our language, our culture and her drive to create a fully Indigenous world for our tamariki and Mokopuna so te reo me ona tikanga can be a daily reality for our future generations.
In this episode we are joined by Dr Liz Stainforth (University of Leeds) to discuss Kristin Ross's Communal Luxury (Verso, 2015). Together we talk about the appeal of utopian history, the relationship between ideas and actions and the value of reclaiming of public space. An interview with Ross in which she discusses her approach to the history of May '68 is available here: https://towardsautonomyblog.wordpress.com/2018/05/23/interview-with-kristin-ross-may-68-beyond-artificial-commemorations-and-remembrances/ ----- The podcast music is Stealing Orchestra & Rafael Dionísio, 'Gente da minha terra (que me mete um nojo do caralho).' Reproduced from the Free Music Archive under a Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives (aka Music Sharing) 3.0 International License, available here:https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Stealing_Orchestra__Rafael_Dionsio/_Rafael_Dionsio_-_Uma_Desgraa_Nunca_Vem_S/Gente_da_minha_terra_que_mete_um_nojo_do_caralho The podcast logo is an adapted version of the Left Book Club logo (1936-48), reproduced, edited and shared under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International licence. Original available here: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Left_Book_Club_logo.png The image in this episode is 'Barricade de la Place Blanche défendue par des femmes pendant la semaine sanglante', available in the public domain here: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Commune_de_Paris_barricade_Place_Blanche.jpg
Head Coach Laughn Berthiaume is joined by former Gorham standouts Rachele Burns, Kristin Ross, Abby Hamilton, Emily Esposito, Kaylea Lundin and Mackenzie Holmes on this weeks episode of Big Time Hoops The Podcast
Te Ahi Kaa meets the entrepreneurial couple behind the super-successful Pipi Mā dolls. Kristin Ross and Hohepa Tuahine are currently working on a 'mihi' Pipi Mā doll and a cartoon series for Māori Television.
Te Ahi Kaa meets the entrepreneurial couple behind the super-successful Pipi Mā dolls. Kristin Ross and Hohepa Tuahine are currently working on a 'mihi' Pipi Mā doll and a cartoon series for Māori Television.
Why do we dream at night? Amber speaks to Kristin Ross, a Kinesiologist & Dream Worker about the mysteries of our inner world. What are all these disjointed short movie, random visual pop-ups we wake remembering? What's their purpose? Are they...
One hundred and forty-five years ago this week, the French state massacred thousands of its own people during the semaine sanglante (bloody week) of the Paris Commune. Kristin Ross’ Communal Luxury: The Political Imaginary of the Paris Commune (Verso Books, 2015) pushes readers to consider Communard thought and actions in a frame that moves beyond the 72 days that traditionally define (and confine) the Commune as an event. This is a Commune that begins with the meetings and reunions of the 1860s rather than the states attempted seizure of the cannons protecting the capital in March 1871. Extending the spatial and temporal bounds of the Commune to include the lifetime of its participants and supporters within and beyond Paris, Communal Luxury opens up new possibilities for our historical understanding of 1871. It also renders visible and analyzes a neglected archive of Communard thought as a resource for contemporary political struggles and activisms in the 21st century. Liberating the Commune from both the French national republican histories that have attempted to incorporate it, and histories of state communism that have cast the Commune as the failed precursor to 1917, Ross pursues the lived and conceived history of a set of events that have gained mythological status in the century and a half since their unfolding. The book directs our attention to the ideas and perspectives of a range of actors and thinkers: Elisabeth Dmitrieff, Eugene Poittier, Elisee Reclus, Peter Kropotkin, William Morris, and Karl Marx. From the Communard call for a Universal Republic, to new programs for education and the arts (including an aspiration to the public beauty of communal luxury), to shifting visions of the possibilities of revolution and solidarity into the future, the book explores what Marx referred to as the working existence of the Commune. More a study of the theory and political praxis of the movement than a history of the Paris Commune in a traditional sense, the book illuminates the past while speaking to the present in profound ways. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
One hundred and forty-five years ago this week, the French state massacred thousands of its own people during the semaine sanglante (bloody week) of the Paris Commune. Kristin Ross’ Communal Luxury: The Political Imaginary of the Paris Commune (Verso Books, 2015) pushes readers to consider Communard thought and actions in a frame that moves beyond the 72 days that traditionally define (and confine) the Commune as an event. This is a Commune that begins with the meetings and reunions of the 1860s rather than the states attempted seizure of the cannons protecting the capital in March 1871. Extending the spatial and temporal bounds of the Commune to include the lifetime of its participants and supporters within and beyond Paris, Communal Luxury opens up new possibilities for our historical understanding of 1871. It also renders visible and analyzes a neglected archive of Communard thought as a resource for contemporary political struggles and activisms in the 21st century. Liberating the Commune from both the French national republican histories that have attempted to incorporate it, and histories of state communism that have cast the Commune as the failed precursor to 1917, Ross pursues the lived and conceived history of a set of events that have gained mythological status in the century and a half since their unfolding. The book directs our attention to the ideas and perspectives of a range of actors and thinkers: Elisabeth Dmitrieff, Eugene Poittier, Elisee Reclus, Peter Kropotkin, William Morris, and Karl Marx. From the Communard call for a Universal Republic, to new programs for education and the arts (including an aspiration to the public beauty of communal luxury), to shifting visions of the possibilities of revolution and solidarity into the future, the book explores what Marx referred to as the working existence of the Commune. More a study of the theory and political praxis of the movement than a history of the Paris Commune in a traditional sense, the book illuminates the past while speaking to the present in profound ways. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
One hundred and forty-five years ago this week, the French state massacred thousands of its own people during the semaine sanglante (bloody week) of the Paris Commune. Kristin Ross’ Communal Luxury: The Political Imaginary of the Paris Commune (Verso Books, 2015) pushes readers to consider Communard thought and actions in a frame that moves beyond the 72 days that traditionally define (and confine) the Commune as an event. This is a Commune that begins with the meetings and reunions of the 1860s rather than the states attempted seizure of the cannons protecting the capital in March 1871. Extending the spatial and temporal bounds of the Commune to include the lifetime of its participants and supporters within and beyond Paris, Communal Luxury opens up new possibilities for our historical understanding of 1871. It also renders visible and analyzes a neglected archive of Communard thought as a resource for contemporary political struggles and activisms in the 21st century. Liberating the Commune from both the French national republican histories that have attempted to incorporate it, and histories of state communism that have cast the Commune as the failed precursor to 1917, Ross pursues the lived and conceived history of a set of events that have gained mythological status in the century and a half since their unfolding. The book directs our attention to the ideas and perspectives of a range of actors and thinkers: Elisabeth Dmitrieff, Eugene Poittier, Elisee Reclus, Peter Kropotkin, William Morris, and Karl Marx. From the Communard call for a Universal Republic, to new programs for education and the arts (including an aspiration to the public beauty of communal luxury), to shifting visions of the possibilities of revolution and solidarity into the future, the book explores what Marx referred to as the working existence of the Commune. More a study of the theory and political praxis of the movement than a history of the Paris Commune in a traditional sense, the book illuminates the past while speaking to the present in profound ways. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
One hundred and forty-five years ago this week, the French state massacred thousands of its own people during the semaine sanglante (bloody week) of the Paris Commune. Kristin Ross’ Communal Luxury: The Political Imaginary of the Paris Commune (Verso Books, 2015) pushes readers to consider Communard thought and actions in a frame that moves beyond the 72 days that traditionally define (and confine) the Commune as an event. This is a Commune that begins with the meetings and reunions of the 1860s rather than the states attempted seizure of the cannons protecting the capital in March 1871. Extending the spatial and temporal bounds of the Commune to include the lifetime of its participants and supporters within and beyond Paris, Communal Luxury opens up new possibilities for our historical understanding of 1871. It also renders visible and analyzes a neglected archive of Communard thought as a resource for contemporary political struggles and activisms in the 21st century. Liberating the Commune from both the French national republican histories that have attempted to incorporate it, and histories of state communism that have cast the Commune as the failed precursor to 1917, Ross pursues the lived and conceived history of a set of events that have gained mythological status in the century and a half since their unfolding. The book directs our attention to the ideas and perspectives of a range of actors and thinkers: Elisabeth Dmitrieff, Eugene Poittier, Elisee Reclus, Peter Kropotkin, William Morris, and Karl Marx. From the Communard call for a Universal Republic, to new programs for education and the arts (including an aspiration to the public beauty of communal luxury), to shifting visions of the possibilities of revolution and solidarity into the future, the book explores what Marx referred to as the working existence of the Commune. More a study of the theory and political praxis of the movement than a history of the Paris Commune in a traditional sense, the book illuminates the past while speaking to the present in profound ways. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
February is a month of LOVE and what better way to celebrate affairs of the heart than by having acclaimed romance novelist Kristin Ross (aka Evelyn Price) join us to chat about two made-for-Lifetime movies starring Eric Roberts? First up is the ripped-from-the-headlines thriller FATAL DESIRE which has Anne Heche seducing Eric Roberts OVER THE INTERNET and convincing him to murder her husband. It's a timeless love story! Then up is the absolutely INSANE recent Lifetime classic STALKED BY MY DOCTOR which featured ER as a surgeon who becomes uncomfortably obsessed with a teenage patient. IT'S AMAZING. All this and more on ERIC ROBERTS IS THE MAN! The post Episode 20: Fatal Desire (2006) & Stalked By My Doctor (2015) (/w Kristin Ross) appeared first on Eric Roberts is the Man.
February is a month of LOVE and what better way to celebrate affairs of the heart than by having acclaimed romance novelist Kristin Ross (aka Evelyn Price) join us to chat about two made-for-Lifetime movies starring Eric Roberts? First up is the ripped-from-the-headlines thriller FATAL DESIRE which has Anne Heche seducing Eric Roberts OVER THE INTERNET and convincing him to murder her husband. It's a timeless love story! Then up is the absolutely INSANE recent Lifetime classic STALKED BY MY DOCTOR which featured ER as a surgeon who becomes uncomfortably obsessed with a teenage patient. IT'S AMAZING. All this and more on ERIC ROBERTS IS THE MAN! The post Episode 20: Fatal Desire (2006) & Stalked By My Doctor (2015) (/w Kristin Ross) appeared first on Eric Roberts is the Man.
Happy New Comic Book Day! This week, Lunchbox is joined by the wonderful Kristin Ross to discuss The Wicked + The Divine! Panel Riot is brought to you by Metamorphosis (Spapgh.com) Sorgatron Media (Sorgatronmedia.com) and The Petri Family, the family that took time to bring you good wine. Find out more at PanelRiot.com and join us on Facebook at facebook.com/groups/PanelRiot
Happy New Comic Book Day! This week Lunchbox is joined by the incredible Kristin Ross to talk about the magic coming out of Image Comics and how we get The Heroes We Need. Panel Riot is brought to you by Metamorphosis (Spapgh.com) Sorgatron Media (Sorgatronmedia.com) and The Petri Family, the family that took time to bring you good wine. Find out more at PanelRiot.com and join us on Facebook at facebook.com/groups/PanelRiot
Happy New Comic Book Day! This week Lunchbox is joined by the incredible Kristin Ross to talk about the magic coming out of Image Comics and how we get The Heroes We Need. Panel Riot is brought to you by Metamorphosis (Spapgh.com) Sorgatron Media (Sorgatronmedia.com) and The Petri Family, the family that took time to bring you good wine. Find out more at PanelRiot.com and join us on Facebook at facebook.com/groups/PanelRiot
A special guest joins us in this week's episode: Kristin Ross, Professor of Comparative Literature at New York University. She has written extensively about Paris Commune. Her book “The Emergence of Social Space: Rimbaud and the Paris Commune” was what inspired Steve Cosson and Michael Friedman to start working on our latest show, Paris Commune, which premiered at ArtsEmerson last month and is having a run in BAM's 30th Next Wave Festival. The play investigates the Parisian working-class uprising in 1871, and we want to extend a special thanks to Kristin for sharing her expertise on the commune, shared social space, revolution, and more with us in this podcast. This episode kicks off with Brian Sgambati performing Leur Bon Dieu, a nineteenth century song in the show originally from the Commune with Lyrics by Eugene Pottier, Music by Emile Bouillon. Wrapping up this week, we have Aysan Celik, singing Mon Homme by Jean-Baptiste Clement, adapted and translated by Michael Friedman. For more, please visit http://www.thecivilians.org. To leave a comment, please visit The Civilians' blog http://blogforthecivilians.blogspot.com/!
Setting out from the controversy over Ireland’s ‘no’ vote to the European constitution, this talk will consider the current global stakes of the more radical form of democracy associated with the Paris Commune.