Articles

UTA #4 - Sub Categories

Living My Life: A Tale of Blood, Sweat, and Anarchy: an Interview with Robin Isaacs

Robin Isaacs is a long-time queer anarchist who has lived in Toronto for the past 30 years. Over the course of a lifetime of political activity, Isaacs has been involved in a variety of activist projects including the anarchist publication Kick It Over, the 1988 “Survival Gathering” in Toronto, Anti-Racist Action, Queer Nation, AIDS ACTION NOW!, Limp Fist, and the Northeastern Federation of Anarchist Communists. This interview was conducted by Dale Altrows in February of 2007 in Montreal, Québec. The complete text of this interview was over 20,000 words, and, due to space restrictions, we have excerpted sections to run in this issue of the journal.

Trans Politics and Anti-Capitalism: An Interview with Dan Irving

Dan Irving is a trans activist and teacher. In 2005, he completed his PhD thesis in Political Science at York University on Trans Activism and Alliances with Labour, Feminist and Gay and Lesbian Organizations. In his work, Irving combines a fierce dedication to trans struggles with a commitment to a Marxist class analysis. He has been an active member of CUPE 3903 at York University, a contract faculty member in the Sexual Diversity Studies program at the University of Toronto, as well as an event organizer and community-based researcher within trans communities. Dan Irving currently lives, writes and struggles in Toronto. Gary Kinsman interviewed him in the spring of 2007.

Against and Beyond the State: An Interview with John Holloway


In February of 2007, John Holloway and Marina Sitrin discussed the new social movements in Latin America, power, the state, and prefigurative politics. This is a continuation of a discussion that began in 2004, also on the topics of power, prefigurative politics and Latin America (http://auto_sol.ao.ca/node/view/1052). John Holloway is the author of Change the World Without Taking Power (Pluto Press, 2002) and co-author of Zapatista! Rethinking Revolution in Mexico (Pluto Press, 1998). Marina Sitrin is the editor of Horizontalism: Voices of Popular Power in Argentina (AK Press, 2006 – Spanish edition, Chilavert, Argentina, 2005) and the author of the forthcoming Insurgent Democracies: Latin America’s New Powers (Citylights Press, 2007)

Walking Away from Failure: A Response to AK Thompson (and Others)

Richard JF Day

When one writes a book, one hopes that it will be read. And when a book is read, one hopes that it will be read well - heartily, carefully, honestly, provocatively. I can say that I’m quite happy that Gramsci Is Dead (Between the Lines, 2006) has been read, and that it has generally been read well. Not surprisingly, I don’t agree with everything everyone has said, so I’m glad to have an occasion to respond to AK Thompson’s lengthy discussion of the book in the previous issue of Upping the Anti, and to a number of other commentators who have taken up similar themes. I will do my best, of course, to read them well, too.

Possible Worlds: Dispatches from the World Social Forum


Since its founding in 2001, the World Social Forum (WSF) has gained international prominence as a space for various activists and NGOs to converge, meet, discuss, and strategize against globalization and imperialism. Organized to counter the annual World Economic Forum, the WSF has grown both in size and influence. Since 2001, hundreds of regional social forums have emerged all over the world. Several such forums are held in Canada.

We are happy to present the following two articles by Carmelle Wolfson and Lesley Wood, which reflect on the seventh forum (held in Naroibi, Kenya) and critically analyze both the relevance and future of the WSF. Activists, including large segments of the Canadian Left, have embraced the forum as an opportunity to organize against capitalism and imperialism. Yet, as these articles suggest, many contradictions exist – not only within the forum proceedings, but within the overall vision of the WSF itself.

Carmelle Wolfson is a media activist involved with Grassy Narrows solidarity work in Canada. She spent seven weeks in Kenya reporting for Carrefour International de la Presse Universitaire Francophone (CIPUF). Lesley Wood is an activist and teaches global sociology and social movement theory at York University.

Prison Abolition in Canada

Arising from and extending the life of slavery’s economy, the modern prison-industrial complex continues to earn the rage of abolitionists worldwide. Like anti-slavery abolitionists before them, prison or penal abolitionists seek to make redundant an institution most people - including many leftists - take as an inevitable feature of human society. In summer 2006, Caitlin Hewitt-White spoke with seven activists within (and beyond) the Canadian state about the struggle for prisoner justice and prison abolition. Peter Collins is currently held in Bath Institution, in year 23 of a 25-year life sentence. He is a politically active prisoner who has done work with communities inside and outside of prison on issues of prisoners’ rights, as well as exposing the corruption and brutality of Correctional Services Canada through his writings, media interviews and political cartoons, which are online at www.buriedaliveillustrations.com. Joint Effort: Emily Aspinwall, Filis Iverson and Sonia Marino are prison abolitionists in Vancouver. They are part of different projects including Joint Effort, Books 2 Prisoners, the Stark Raven Media Collective, prisonjustice.ca and the Vancouver Prison Justice Day Committee. Julia Sudbury is Professor of Ethnic Studies at Mills College, Oakland, CA. She is editor of Global Lockdown: Race, Gender and the Prison-Industrial Complex (Routledge 2005) and author of numerous books and articles on women’s activism and women’s prisons. She is a founding member of Critical Resistance and former member of the Prison Activist Resource Center. Kim Pate is currently the Executive Director of the Canadian Association of Elizabeth Fry Societies. A teacher and lawyer by training, she has advocated for criminalized men, women and youth in the Canadian state. Patricia Monture is a member of the Mohawk nation, Grand River Territory, a lawyer by training and a long-time activist. She teaches sociology at the University of Saskatchewan in Saskatoon.

Raising the Roof: Housing Activism in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside

Krisztina Kun

Of all the socio-economic problems facing residents of Vancouver, housing is the number one issue on almost everyone’s mind these days. Homelessness is rising at alarming rates, and nowhere is this felt more acutely than in Vancouver’s most impoverished neighbourhood, the Downtown Eastside (DTES), where the number of homeless people has doubled in three years. At this rate, it is projected that, by 2010, the year the Olympics hit town, there will be more than 3 000 people living on the streets.

Because of the Olympics, the ongoing condo boom, and the fact that Vancouver’s downtown peninsula is quickly running out of land on which to build glass towers, all roads point East to the DTES as the next area marked for million-dollar condos. Realtors are already marketing the area as “hip” and “edgy.” The recent Woodward’s development, celebrated as a victory four years ago by housing activists when the City of Vancouver bought it and slated 200 units for social housing, is now seen as the flagship of gentrification that will change the face of the area. With slogans such as “be bold or move to suburbia,” Woodward’s has become the symbol of the rapid shift in the area from low-income rental suites to upscale ownership. The area is so promising that speculators are buying up buildings and leaving them empty, driving up the price of the remaining housing stock.

Kimiko Inouye on bell hooks and Amelia Mesa-Bains

Local and Organic

Kimiko Inouye

bell hooks and Amelia Mesa-Bains. Homegrown: Engaged Cultural Criticism. South End Press, 2006.

In Homegrown: Engaged Cultural Criticism, bell hooks and Amelia Mesa-Bains discuss critical perspectives on the social conditions of African and Latin American communities in the United States. Homegrown takes up issues related to multiculturalism, art, pedagogy, socio-economic oppression, resistance and revolution. It is in many ways an extension of the critical, creative, and pedagogical practices already associated with hooks and Mesa-Bains. hooks is perhaps most well-known for her critical writings on the workings of race, class, and gender in popular Western culture, including Feminist Theory: From Margin to Center (1984), Black Looks: Race and Representation (1992), and Teaching to Transgress: Education and the Practice of Freedom (1994). Mesa-Bains, as an artist, curator and writer, has been involved with a number of Chicano art projects, including Chicano Art: Resistance and Affirmation and Mi Alma, Mi Tierra, Mi Gente: Contemporary Chicana Art.

Presented as a dialogue between hooks and Mesa-Bains, Homegrown weaves in the authors’ personal experiences in order to give readers a sense of where they are coming from in their analyses of race, class, sexuality and gender. Rather than aim their text at an academic audience by contributing new theoretical perspectives and frameworks, hooks and Mesa-Bains aim their book at a wide range of activists in North America; the use of the word “homegrown” addresses this audience of “organic intellectuals.” While the political, historical, cultural, and economic conditions that hooks and Mesa-Bains discuss are situated within the United States, the analyses are relevant to activists in Canada as well.

Erica Meiners on Angela Davis, Karlene Faith and Julia Sudbury

The New Abolitionists

Erica Meiners

Review of – Angela Davis. Are Prisons Obsolete? Seven Stories Press 2003; Angela Davis. Abolition Democracy: Prisons, Democracy, and Empire. Seven Stories Press 2005; Karlene Faith with Anne Near. 13 Women: Parables from Prison. Douglas & McIntyre 2006.; and Julia Sudbury (Ed.). Global Lockdown. Routledge 2005

Women, specifically women of colour, are one of the fastest growing prison populations in the US. In Illinois, the state where I currently reside, between 1983 and 2002 the number of women in prison for drug related crimes skyrocketed from 32 to 1,325, a 4,041% leap.1 This growth is mirrored across the US. As Sudbury states:

Whereas in 1970 there were 5,600 incarcerated women, by June 2001, 161,200 women were held in U.S. prisons and jails, representing a staggering 2,800% increase. (xiv)

While Canada, with almost the same population as California, “holds approximately 350 women in federal detention centers” and “California has about 11, 000” (Faith, 2006, 340), women in prison in Canada, California, and across the US, are overwhelmingly arrested for offenses that are non-violent and generally drug related. Research clearly documents that incarcerated women are undereducated, under or unemployed, frequently homeless prior to entering prison or jail, and they have a significantly higher rate of experience with sexual or physical violence. As Faith writes, poverty is the “common denominator.” “If a women is not poor when she enters prison, she will be when she leaves” (5), as women with criminal records, in particular in the US, are formally and informally denied access to higher education, housing, employment and social assistance benefits.

Scott Clark on Sheila Wilmot's "Taking Responsibility Taking Direction: White Anti-Racism in Canada"

Getting Over Guilt - Reviewed by Scott Clarke

Sheila Wilmot. Taking Responsibility Taking Direction: White Anti-Racism in Canada. Arbeiter Ring, 2005

How can toward activists move from a cycle of guilt and inaction over racism to developing anti-racist politics that effectively challenge white supremacy in Canada? Taking Responsibility, Taking Direction: White Anti-Racism in Canada is a timely and critical look at the anti-racist politics of ‘the left.’ Driven by the goal of building a movement for social change rooted in anti-racist socialist politics, Sheila Wilmot reflects on different forms of anti-racist activism in Canada, and suggests methods for more effective organizing in the future.

At a slim 151 pages, this book serves as an introduction to anti-racist socialist politics and the role of white allies. As this book is intended for those invested in political struggle, Wilmot could have delved deeper into the complexities of integrating her anti-racist ideals into organized forms of resistance. For activists who have been committed to challenging racism within ourselves and our organizations, Taking Responsibility Taking Direction will help to illuminate many of the ongoing struggles we face. Yet the text falls short in providing us with tools and in-depth personal accounts to increase our effectiveness as anti-racists in Canada. Despite these criticisms, I commend Wilmot for addressing white anti-racist activism in a Canadian context; the concise resource she has produced reminds us why we need to address anti-racism in our organizing, and it is a tool we can use to discuss, debate and analyze our politics and engagement with anti-racist activism.

UTA 4 Cover

UTA 4 Cover

Here's the cover image from Issue 4.

The Politics of Solidarity: Six Nations, Leadership, and the Settler Left

By Tom Keefer

This article will address some issues which have arisen in the context of non-native activists doing solidarity work with the Haudenosaunee (Six Nations) people of the Grand River Territory who recently reclaimed land near Caledonia, Ontario.1 I will begin by discussing the problems with how many non-native activists have used the concept of “taking leadership” to guide their activism around this struggle, and I then will look at the spaces and places where I think non-native activists should focus their efforts in support of indigenous sovereignty. In order to do so, I will draw on the work of black power activists Stokely Carmichael and Charles Hamilton as their work provides a relevant model for non-native activists looking to build solidarity with Six Nations. I will conclude by addressing the importance of the work being done by trade union activists supporting the people of Six Nations.2

UTA #4 Editorial: Becoming the Enemy They Deserve - Organizational Questions for a New “New Left”

We are living in a moment of paradox. Prospects for rebuilding the radical left in North America seem as tentative as ever. At the same time, the face of our enemy has never been clearer. Capitalist class rule makes little attempt to hide its deprivation and hypocrisy. Imperialist wars of aggression continue in Afghanistan and Iraq. The war drums beat for an assault on Iran as democratic rights continue to be eroded in the name of the War on Terror. The spectre of ecological crisis stares us in the face. It’s a mess that leaves us wondering: if the enemy and the stakes in our struggle are clear like never before, why isn’t the radical left getting organized? Why, with some notable and inspiring exceptions, are so few anti-capitalist collectives and leftist organizations stepping forward to match our opponent blow for blow?

Upping the Anti #4

Issue 5 coming in October 2007. Deadline for submissions is August 1st 2007. If you are planning to submit an article for Issue 5 please consult the UTA submission guide.



Issue #4 of Upping the Anti is being launched in Toronto on May 1st, 2007. If you would like to receive a hard copy of the journal or to distribute the journal in your community or organizations, please email uta_distro@yahoo.ca so that we can add you to our list of local distributors. This issue of the journal is 182 pages long and we are selling single copies for $10 including postage. If you want 5 or more copies for distribution, the journal is $5 per copy, and we'll cover the postage. Journal articles and PDF files will be uploaded to the website in a staggered process over the next few months.

Our mailing address where you can send your $10 in well concealed cash to for a copy of the journal is: Upping the Anti, 998 Bloor St. West, P.O. Box 10571, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M6H 4H9. If you live in the US or elsewhere, please order our journal through AK Press as it costs us too much to mail it to you from Canada. Please continue reading this post for the full table of contents of this issue and the introduction to this issue.