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The Occupation Will Be Televised

October 23, 2009, 2:28 pm

x-posted: howtheuniversityworks.com

In response to the massive re-orientation of education toward job training, privatization and the standardization of curricular outcomes mandated by the Bologna Process, students across Europe have been turning out by the thousands. This past June, as many as 250,000 students, parents, schoolteachers, college faculty and staff coordinated a week-long education strike in 90 cities across Germany.

Right now, an estimated 2,000 undergraduates are occupying parts of the University of Vienna. You can follow it nearly live on this guy‘s cellphone camera.

If the topic of occupying campus space interests you, be sure to check out the Academia Insurgent panel being organized by Eli Meyerhoff (University of Minnesota) and the countercartographies collective at UNC-Chapel Hill for the Annual Association of American Geographers Meeting Washington, DC, 14-18 April 2010. 

Topics for the panel organized by Elizabeth Johnson and Eli Meyerhoff, Academia Insurgent: Occupying and Communizing Universities // Militant Research and Organizing:

* Strategies and tactics for university occupations

* Theorizing ‘occupation’ of academic spaces and times

* Militant research on universities

* Creating an “undercommons” that feeds us and feeds off of the university, enabling us to do radical work from *within* the institution without becoming *of* the institution

* Collectively preventing the alienating effects of leading such dual lives

* Valorizing our own work without submitting it to universities’ disciplinary metrics

* Maintaining our own invisibility (from capitalism/consumerism and from the university) while linking with one another and with common projects elsewhere

* Building “institutions of the common” across universities and across disciplines, as well as between academics, activists, artists, diverse economies, etc.

* Developing mutually supportive relationships for communities, movements, our teaching, and our activism without creating formal(izing) organizations

* Finding ways within the university’s walls to not only create “living communism” but also to “spread anarchy”

* Learning from university struggles around the world and across history

 

 

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2 Responses to The Occupation Will Be Televised

stinkcat - October 24, 2009 at 7:14 am

“Finding ways within the university’s walls to not only create “living communism” but also to “spread anarchy”"Actually, what we have in most universties already looks like communism. After all, decisions on who gets what office space, or computers or parking spaces are not determined in a market, but by some czar.

goxewu - October 24, 2009 at 10:09 am

“already looks like communism” = “some czar”? Perhaps stinkcat (I won’t ask) might take another look at Russian history, ca. 1917 – 1925. Maybe stinkcat (I won’t ask) meant “commissar.”