Call For Contributors: Black Resistance to Slavery and its Afterlives
The Activist History Review invites proposals for our February 2020 issue: Black Resistance to Slavery and its Afterlives
The Future is Another Country
The Activist History Review invites proposals for our February 2020 issue: Black Resistance to Slavery and its Afterlives
By positioning themselves as moral actors, these citizen photographers challenge existing power relations.
Black queer and trans direct action actively and visibly challenges the “daily choreography of conformity.”
This interactive art exhibit explores how the movement of affluent people to a few wealthy zip codes nationally affects income inequality.
Re-visiting creative tactics of protest movements active in repressive environments of the Eastern Bloc might then help us understand how to (once again) use the creative genius of avant-garde artists, subvert the increasingly authoritarian contemporary rhetoric, and create a better world.
It is misleading to call impeachment “justice” when it reflects the priorities of empire.
Beaumont Kin is a good example of how those within the profession should embrace the activist historian mantle in our own time and in our own, very real world.






