We Are Many

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Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2012-10-16
Publisher(s): A K Pr Distribution
List Price: $21.00

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Summary

"A wonderful collection of questions and reflections on the state of the movement today, where we came from, and where we might be going. It is all too rare that in the process of creating the movement and living the moment, participants and thinkers step back and ask the most pressing questions. This book is an important step."?Marina Sitrin, Occupy Wall Street organizer and author of Horizontalism We have all been swept up by the momentum of the Occupy movement. We have seen the results of years of organizing in different communities come together in ways that few could have imagined, bolstered by the scores of people who have left the comfort of their daily routine behind and taken to the streets. Yet as a movement so overflowing with new social and political actors, we lack the framework we need to help us all to understand what a social movement is, to understand how change has happened in the past, to understand what this moment means and what this movement makes possible. We Are Manyis a reflection on Occupy from within the heart of the movement itself. Examining key questions?what worked? what didn't? why? how? is it reproducible??the authors and activists in this collection point toward a movement-based framework for future organizing. Heavily illustrated and annotated, We Are Manyis a celebration of what worked, and a thoughtful analysis of what didn't. Contributors include David Graeber, Gan Golan, Cindy Milstein, George Katsiaficas, Kristen Williams, Lester Spence, Marisa Holmes, Max Rameau, Josh MacPhee, Vijay Prashad, CrimethInc, Team Colors, Bring the Ruckus, and more.

Table of Contents

Introductionp. 1
This Concerns Everyonep. 9
Movement Storyp. 20
A Qualitative Quilt Born of Pizzatopiap. 23
Movement Storyp. 36
From Oscar Grant to Occupyp. 39
Whiteness and the 99%p. 46
Occupy and the 99%p. 53
Movement Storyp. 66
Occupy Research and DataCenter: Research By and For the Movementp. 69
Where Is the Color in Occupy?p. 75
Who is Oakland?p. 81
Research & Destroy: Plaza-Riot-Communep. 88
The Coming Occupationp. 95
Upsurge in Movements Around the Globep. 105
People Make the Occupation, and the Occupation Makes the Peoplep. 115
Occupy Before and Beyondp. 123
Movement Storyp. 134
Room for the Poorp. 137
Movement Storyp. 146
Declaration of the Occupation of the City of New Yorkp. 148
The Center Cannot Holdp. 151
Consensus: What it Is, What it is Not, Where it Came From, and Where it Must Gop. 163
Movement Storyp. 174
Reflections from the People of Color Caucus at Occupy Wall Streetp. 177
Occupy to Liberatep. 185
RANT: Solidarity in Practice for the Street Demonstrationsp. 188
Movement Storyp. 190
Overcoming Internal Pacificationp. 193
Cops and the 99%p. 205
Reflections From the Fight Against Policingp. 217
CrimethInc. Ex-Worker's Collectivep. 229
Occupy Oakland: Statement of Solidarity Against Police Repressionp. 237
Taking the Streetsp. 239
Radicals and the 99%p. 247
No Revolution Without Religionp. 255
OWS and Labor Attempting the Possiblep. 263
Where Was the Social Forum in Occupy?p. 275
Movement Storyp. 284
Occupy Wall Street Community Agreementp. 286
Occupy Anarchismp. 291
Movement Storyp. 306
Movement Story: Anonymousp. 308
Movement Storyp. 310
Movement Story: Unwomanp. 312
Unlocking the Radical Imaginationp. 315
The Art of Cultural Resistancep. 325
Shine a Light an Itp. 337
Movement Storyp. 344
Farmers, Cloud Communities, and Issue-Driven Occupationsp. 351
Occupying Democracyp. 361
Occupy Wall Street: Statement of Autonomyp. 369
Movement Storyp. 370
Is Occupy Over?p. 373
Strategic Directions for the Occupy Movementp. 381
In Desert Citiesp. 389
Team Colors Collective: Messy Hearts Made of Thunderp. 399
Some Oakland Antagonists: Occupy Oakland Is Dead-Long Live the Oakland Communep. 409
Rome Wasn't Sacked In a Dayp. 417
Afterwordp. 425
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

Excerpts

We Are Many: Excerpt from the Editors' Foreword
By Kate Khatib, Mike McGuire, and Margaret Killjoy

What you will find in the pages that follow is a movement-oriented examination of the Occupy phenomenon and the struggles that followed in its wake. It is a strategic intervention intended to deepen our understanding and analysis of what we've accomplished, and to illuminate key strategies for future struggles.

We have all been swept up by the momentum of the Occupy movement. Many of us have seen the results of years of organizing in different communities come together in ways that few of us could have imagined. Yet the most inspiring--and challenging--aspect of this burgeoning movement has been, for us, the number of people who have left the comfort of their daily routines, and are living and breathing in wholly new ways. A popular, horizontal movement in the United States is a dream come true--but as a movement so overflowing with new social and political actors, we lack, as a collective body, the framework we need to help us all to understand what a social movement is, to understand how change has happened in the past, to understand what this moment means and what this movement makes possible. For this movement to stick, it is critical that we develop a framework for participants to be able to look beyond our immediate circumstances and dilemmas, to celebrate what has worked, to think through what has not, and to see that our actions are deeply meaningful.

This project was conceptualized late in the Fall of 2011 as an attempt to develop tools and analysis from within the movement (and in collaboration with close allies) that will strengthen our collective understanding of Occupy and its possibilities. With the help of many of the contributors to this volume, we have worked with organizers and activists from around the world to take a critical and engaged look at Occupy, and its transition from a spontaneous public uprising to an enduring social movement is to examine Occupy's genesis from the perspective of strategy--what worked? what didn't? why? how? is it reproducible?--with an eye toward building a movement-based framework for future organizing. Our months of intense experience with our fellow Occupy participants have left us with a deep desire for collective reflection, and with the sense that our desires are shared by so many others within the movement. It is critical to fill in the gaps inherent in a movement with so many new actors, and we hope that this volume will be a small step towards creating that foundation.

Over the course of the past year, a storm of books have emerging about the Occupy Movement. We believe that this book project is unique in its orientation. We do not seek to historicize or archive the movement. Instead we view this as a book from within the movement that will serve the movement.

Our goal was to create a book that was highly collaborative in its composition, more like a narrative composed of many voices, and less like a collection of disparate essays. We encouraged experienced writers to work with newer voices in their contributions; we were thrilled to see more seasoned
activists taking this as an opportunity to think through movement strategy with those who have only recently become politically-engaged. The collaborative process went right down to our choice of publisher for this project: the venerable AK Press, the nation's most productive anarchist publishing house, and close comrades of not just the editors and authors in this book, but of the movement itself. The choice of AK Press speaks volumes about the intention of this project: this is a movement book and we feel its important that it be published by a movement publisher, one whose understanding of Occupy's history and development is deep and concrete. In Oakland and in Baltimore, the members of the AK Press collective have been active participants in Occupy from the start, moving the entire AK Press Baltimore office to McKeldin Square in the early days of the encampment to serve as a makeshift media and information center, and, in Oakland, bringing the entire collective out into the streets to participate in the general strike, not as observers, not as booksellers, but as active collaborators in an action that has begun to reshape dominant discourse for decades to come. And, finally, we chose to publish this book with AK Press, because, as a truly collectively-run business, AK Press models the principles of egalitarian and non-hierarchical organizing that we see embodied in the best elements of the Occupy movement. We know that here we are among friends and allies, and we thank the AK Press collective for providing this opportunity.

Many of the authors included in this collection could have - and did - write entire books about Occupy on their own; our goal here was to include a diverse set of voices, and to encourage authors to make short, strategic interventions, to think critically about the strategic implication of their analysis, and to construct it with an eye toward the future. The result is the remarkable pastiche of materials in the pages that follow - a combination of critical analysis, strategic development, and movement stories, coupled with primary-source materials drawn from the streets and camps of Occupy itself.

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