I love you, thank you so much for this. The way you narrate the book is exceptional and gets the audience very excited. ❤
@BroccoliDog4203 күн бұрын
Wonderful stuff as always!
@ErwinGünther-l6m3 күн бұрын
20:00
@BroccoliDog4204 күн бұрын
I thought this ended here I just pulled up your channel to see a lot more chapters. I hope you’re well, I know it’s a hard week.
@neongreen95767 күн бұрын
Thank you for recording this!
@poodaw17 күн бұрын
give this guy an oscar right now
@carrotthemonkey126519 күн бұрын
Thanks!
@arianedowell418421 күн бұрын
Thanks!
@ViziaFilms21 күн бұрын
Sounds like it was recorded in a toilet. Accoustic padding and bass traps are key here, or even just a lavalier mic. Thanks for the effort though.
@AudioAnarchy20 күн бұрын
lol, thanks. I guess this one was recorded before I bought the nicer mic. I can’t remember now…
@AudioAnarchy20 күн бұрын
@@ViziaFilms plus, I was only recording it while taking a shit… is that not good?
@ViziaFilms20 күн бұрын
@@AudioAnarchy no its fine, cause it sounds like shit too
@AudioAnarchy20 күн бұрын
@@ViziaFilms phew
@michaelrush548225 күн бұрын
X. if I say. ... Say prison. day to day.
@henrymorgan1741Ай бұрын
Great work! You’ve made my Hampshire College class more accessible.
@hamidbouchhib3489Ай бұрын
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
@Serena_MuellerАй бұрын
Listening for an anthropology masters class-I would have listened regardless, but I’m so thankful this reading was made accessible 🖤
@MehrnazKabirАй бұрын
Thank you so much for this, the tones and accents you use make it much easier to understand and you read very clearly this is si helpful to my homework getting done. i appreciate the time you used to make these videos!
@tyleroscal24022 ай бұрын
Afterward - 2:10:13
@rhianneclarke17562 ай бұрын
Thank you for reading editing and uploading this - I likely never would had read this book otherwise. It has been a constant companion with me over the past month.
@alexandraengert25192 ай бұрын
This is such a great accessibility aid! Thank you for doing this. Also, where are you from bc you go in and out of a southern accent and that tells me Missouri lol
@AudioAnarchy2 ай бұрын
Virginia
@adnanahmad10512 ай бұрын
What the fuck is this noise? Get rid of it
@viywtf2 ай бұрын
BRO TYSMMM FOR THISS 😭😭😭
@latoyamoore5552 ай бұрын
You're doing God's work❤
@latoyamoore5552 ай бұрын
You're doing God's work👐
@fuadalsaify78882 ай бұрын
This definition of fascism parol, what is happening in Gaza by the Nazi Zionist against Palestinian ethnic cleansing, I wonder what are you guys think about the recent fascism in Palestine by the settler colonial genocidal state of Israel?
@nataliepaad18692 ай бұрын
So glad i found this! Thank you!!
@VioletRose-f6m2 ай бұрын
I find the accents very distracting and annoying. It takes away from the text . Regular voice is better.
Keeping me company at work.. thank you for not dumping commercials into these readings.
@Jasper-ML3 ай бұрын
Best audio version available.. nice work!
@movies83173 ай бұрын
5.5 tet offensive - 2 hours 31 min
@mythebe3 ай бұрын
Thank you for providing this service for free. Mental diagnosis make visual reading very difficult for me, and I come form extreme poverty, so I rely on free sources of education. Do you think most people are just really sheltered? Whenever people want to know what to do about murderers or people who've crossed children's boundaries sexually instead of prison I agree with Angela Davis. I lived with a murderer, and I know people who had crossed children's boundaries sexually it's far better to do nothing with those people than to put them in prison because I've spent significant time with these people and they aren't dangerous, they just made a mistake. Mistakes are how we learn, not prisons which end up harming everyone as opposed to these harmless people I know.
@mythebe3 ай бұрын
Thank you for providing this service. I struggle with reading, so this makes a huge difference in my ability to learn. I hope you consider dong Perv by Jesse Bering because it's supposed to be amazing. Thank you to the people who support his channel financially. I'm extremely poor, so my ability to learn depends on what's free to the public.
@ryad12813 ай бұрын
This must be shared and heard by absolutely everyone
@greygreen64633 ай бұрын
Hey sorry to be irrelevant but did you remove some of your books or did they get removed? I was enjoying your read of Fanon's Wretched of the Earth and commentary, but it seems to have disappeared! I can still listen to Zinn I'm in the middle of and obvs, started up Kropotkin for lack of Fanon and you have so much here to enjoy besides; but it seems like a few more titles than the Fanon have disappeared from the playlist. Or am I tripping/missing something? Thanks so much for these awesome reads and your discussion. Listening while I do chores or ride my bike means a lot to me <3
@AudioAnarchy3 ай бұрын
Flagged for copyright, sadly. Some hours I won’t get back. However, they may still be up on the SoundCloud page. on.soundcloud.com/5SetBNPhdYNo1JNN9
@d.w.stratton40784 ай бұрын
I don't know why but I can't tolerate the pacing of how this is read. It feels like reading a picture book to a 1st grade classroom.
@AudioAnarchy3 ай бұрын
I have to pause so that *everyone* can see the illustrations.
@AudioAnarchy3 ай бұрын
Tomie dePaola put a lot of work into them.
@AlexRide-z7g4 ай бұрын
Thanks for this! I read this book as a part of starting a mutual aid project in my community but was struggling to read the last bit so the audiobook helped a lot
@AudioAnarchy4 ай бұрын
That’s great to hear! This half is the most helpful, in my opinion, so I’m glad you got to get through it!
@tangerinesarebetterthanora70604 ай бұрын
Is this Jared from the channel Revolution and Ideology?
@AudioAnarchy4 ай бұрын
Nope
@tangerinesarebetterthanora70604 ай бұрын
@@AudioAnarchy kinda sounds like him. Thanks for the recording.
@ani4animakesublind4 ай бұрын
What happened to the wretched of the earth videos! They were helping me read along so much!
@AudioAnarchy4 ай бұрын
Copyright struck.
@ani4animakesublind4 ай бұрын
@@AudioAnarchy devastating 😔
@AudioAnarchy4 ай бұрын
Tell me about it. That was a lot of hours!
@greygreen64633 ай бұрын
Damn. tysm for while they lasted RIP, quality reads </3
@AudioAnarchy3 ай бұрын
on.soundcloud.com/5SetBNPhdYNo1JNN9 Still up on SoundCloud until some narc ruins the joy and fun of theft
@annahurtado31364 ай бұрын
I actually think the title fits, and so far it has described frameworks for practicing anarchism in everyday scenarios. This is appropriate in acting as a guide for anarchism *where you are*. We are then invited to put these frameworks into action in our particular daily lives. The philosophy, understanding of what we are doing already that might be considered anarchism, and articulation of some of the "interstitial spaces" for practicing anarchism acts as the guide, rather than as a "how to".
@tonyisnotdead4 ай бұрын
anarchist who believes in land ownership?
@AudioAnarchy3 ай бұрын
I mean, I “believe” in it in the same way that I “believe” the police can arrest me for made-up causes. It’s a material reality of our world. Should land be used to the benefit of all, rather than building equity for the owning class? Yes. Is it? No.
@DavesGroovesandCreations4 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing this book. I’m reading this with my summer book club and looking forward to some invaluable insights from Angela.
@eidoleon4 ай бұрын
The idea that representation is "difficult" is one that underpins the neolibral hegemony, while bolstering the right wing fuck heads. This idea that its somehow "more" effort for creative sorts to include a vast array of images than to stick to than to just stick with what it proven to sell is false. The idea of it being difficult allows greater praise to be lumped onto this neolibral capitalistic hellscape. How else could we achive such "good" representation? What else but the market of ideas could prove that "diversity" is good. Because it is profitable. Its such an annoying position to be in because when disney expects praise and press for their 20th "first gay character" the desire to critique their actions is weighed against the numerous shitheads that somehow still exist that think princess peach wearing pants is too "woke". Of corse, these people and their screaming are factored into the marketing for these companies. They both show, and allow the claim to be made that such representation is "difficult". There can be "challenges" when including certain forms of diversity as a creative. The same challenges one faces when exploring topics and points of veiw that you dont have much personal experience with. (I think its still a good idea to "research" even if you do have personal experience with a topic, because no two people can be the same, though it all depends on your goals etc). Its even more embarasing when corporations with vast recources manage to fuck up real basic shit. It kinda proves they dont actually give a shit, just wanna sell a sanitized version of these experiences. I could almost understand the benifit of a "sanitized" version, if it ultimatly serves as a stepping stone to greater understanding and empathy. But i also have long thought that this idea that the "mass market" needs to be talked down to and coddled is a self-fulfilling prophecy. It does make me think of the way that "woman born in a mans body" was spread as a way to make cis people "get it". And while i think it worked to an extent, for a little while, especially if that was your experience. But it also locked people into that simplification. In some cases preventing them from recognizing their own trans/nonbinary-ness. And others into being "confused" as to why there were "suddenly" 72 genders. Anyways stories and art are an important tool to help people see the possibility of better futures. "Representation" is an important part of that, and i dont think the concept being taken over by stupid corporations should be enough to deminish that. Its difficult as an artist to balance what I want with what I know is likely to happen if i were to get what I "want" (recognition and understanding, a stable income). I'm going to try to keep the philosophy of anarchisim close to my heart, but sometimes I fear the balancing act of "playing the game" to get my art and ideas to spread farther, and being actually true to what I believe is best and what I actually want to do. In a way I think this gets at what this book is about. For most anarchists, its not possible to live as we would like as as we would think is moral and best. Its also not possible for a lot of people to do direct action daily (or at all). I think maybe something like "every day anarchisim" might have been a more relevant title. But i do think there is an interesting idea in framing these ways of thinking as "practical". Thinking and "philosophy" arent always seen as something "practical", but i think anarchisim is a very "practical" philosophy. Its just very different from the overarching "philosophy" of the modern world, in ways that I think even devoted anarchists can struggle to pick apart in their own mind. Anyhow, Thanks for doing these readings! They're great to listen to at work
@paintpaintpaintco.60394 ай бұрын
You are a real one bruh
@mobybongo4 ай бұрын
We really appreciate your work! Thank you! (and nice Oscar Wilde impersonation!)
@katherinebaggett3144 ай бұрын
Thank you audio anarchy ❤
@AudioAnarchy4 ай бұрын
You’re welcome! Angela Davis does incredible work and always has. And she anti-copyrights a ton of it to make sure it’s available to everyone. Very good and cool person.
@oupsie90214 ай бұрын
7:20 Inventivisation through money and goods alongside healthy competition that creates the most productivity. This argument assumes that human nature is inhwrently lazy so workers basically have to be tricked into working
@oupsie90214 ай бұрын
10:30 most inventjions came about BC of some version of collective work or resource sharing, even if it's being propped up by gov funding
@oupsie90214 ай бұрын
30:10 interesting discussion of how the idea of work is constructed in our lives
@oupsie90214 ай бұрын
37:00 anarchist approach - talking about reframing what We do in this world as care
@oupsie90214 ай бұрын
39:25 anarchist luxury/leisure what does luxury look like that isn't defined through work and access to goods we can purchase. Communal luxury?
@oupsie90214 ай бұрын
41:15 we would have to give up certain things for others. Removing our sense of self from the relationship of work helps us remove us from the domination of the relationship of work. Allows us to look at our lives W fresh eyes and relate to the things that give us pleasure.