Rudy joins Dr. Ron G. Davis, founder of the San Francisco Mime Troupe in 1959, for a reflection of a life in art and politics. We discuss the SFMT's beginnings during the civil rights era, how it turned into a "guerilla" operation, the relationship to Teatro Campesino, civil rights and the black radical movement, why his time with the SFMT came to an end, and the influence of Brecht and his PhD work on a Brechtian ecology.
Nasserism and the Egyptian Revolution of 1952
Escaping the Constitutional Bind with Aziz Rana
The Making of a Working Class Revolutionary: an Interview with Jerome Scott
Artificial Intelligence
The Frankfurt School in Context (1923-69)
Mining and the Environment with Martin Lallana
Jihadism and Military Juntas in the Sahel with Alexander Thurston
[REMASTER] Communism in the Colours of France: The French Communist Party (1920-2024)
The Value of Dune: a Communistic Perspective
Towards the Abyss: Ukraine from Maidan to War with Volodymyr Ishchenko
Letter: Llorente v. Schaeffer
Gene Bruskin: A Life in the Labor Movement
The Korean Miracle’s Rural Legacy
The Mexican Revolution
Seeds of Power: The Global Food System and The Green Revolution with Raj Patel
Just Another Kautsky Fan
Captives: the History of Rikers Island and New York City with Jarrod Shanahan
Citizen Marx: Republicanism and the Formation of Karl Marx’s Social and Political Thought with Bruno Leipold
Solidarność and the Polish People's Republic
The Algerian Revolution II (1965-99): Developmentalism, Marketization and War
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