Against the Grain – May 9, 2012
Selma James on Unwaged Work; Peter Linebaugh on the Luddites

12:00 PM Pacific Time: Mondays - Wednesdays
Acclaimed program of ideas, in-depth analysis, and commentary on a variety of matters—political, economic, social, and cultural—important to progressive and radical thinking and activism. Against the Grain is produced and hosted by Sasha Lilley.
Selma James on Unwaged Work; Peter Linebaugh on the Luddites
Litigator Michelle Alexander talks to Sasha Lilley about her book “The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness.”
Richard Lichtman explains what Karl Marx meant when he used the term “alienation” to describe the condition and consciousness of workers under capitalism.
A new documentary features previously unseen footage of Stokeley Carmichael, Angela Davis, and other African American militants, and commentary by Robin DG Kelley, Talib Kweli, Harry Belafonte, Kathleen Cleaver, and Erykah Badu about the trajectory of black struggles from the late 1960s to the 70s.
Sasha Lilley and Mitch Jeserich host live coverage of International Workers’ Day from downtown Oakland.
According to U.C. Berkeley professor Margaret Weir, long-held assumptions about poverty and inequality in US metropolitan areas no longer hold up. Weir describes how the social and political geography of poverty has shifted in recent years.
Mexico-based journalist John Gibler talks about the the political economy of the US-Mexico drug trade.
Joey Cain, guest curator of an exhibition at the San Francisco Public Library, talks to Sasha Lilley about the life of Harry Hay, the communist father of the gay liberation movement.
Nancy Cohen, author of Delirium, argues that the backlash to the sexual revolution has fueled American politics for over three decades.
The lives of recent immigrants, notes UC Berkeley’s Leti Volpp, are often framed as a battle between “tradition” and “modernity.” But blaming, for example, interpersonal violence in immigrant communities on regressive non-Western cultures is deeply problematic.