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Tuesday, May 23, 2023, 6:00 pm PST

Ruth Wilson Gilmore in conversation with Clarence Lusane

Price: Free (Registration Required)

City Lights and Verso Books celebrate the paperback publication of Abolition Geography: Essays Towards Liberation – by Ruth Wilson Gilmore – published by Verso Books

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This is a virtual event that will be hosted by City Lights on the Zoom platform. You will need a device that is capable of accessing the internet. If you have not used Zoom before, you may consider referencing Getting Started with Zoom.

City Lights and Verso Books celebrate the paperback publication of

Abolition Geography: Essays Towards Liberation

by Ruth Wilson Gilmore

published by Verso Books

Edited with an introduction by Brenna Bhandar and Alberto Toscano.

Gathering together Ruth Wilson Gilmore’s work from over three decades, Abolition Geography presents her singular contribution to the politics of abolition as theorist, researcher, and organizer, offering scholars and activists ways of seeing and doing to help navigate our turbulent present.

Abolition Geography moves us away from explanations of mass incarceration and racist violence focused on uninterrupted histories of prejudice or the dull compulsion of neoliberal economics. Instead, Gilmore offers a geographical grasp of how contemporary racial capitalism operates through an “anti-state state” that answers crises with the organized abandonment of people and environments deemed surplus to requirement. Gilmore escapes one-dimensional conceptions of what liberation demands, who demands liberation, or what indeed is to be abolished. Drawing on the lessons of grassroots organizing and internationalist imaginaries, Abolition Geography undoes the identification of abolition with mere decarceration, and reminds us that freedom is not a mere principle but a place.

Ruth Wilson Gilmore is Professor of Earth and Environmental Sciences, and American Studies at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York, where she is also Director of the Center for Place, Culture, and Politics. She is the cofounder of the California Prison Moratorium Project, and, along with Angela Davis: Critical Resistance. In 2003, she cofounded Californians United for a Responsible Budget (CURB) to fight jail and prison construction and currently serves on its board. Professor Gilmore has been a leading scholar and speaker on topics including prisons, decarceration, racial capitalism, oppositional movements, state-making, and more. She has received numerous honors for her work which include: Angela Y. Davis prize for Public Scholarship, the Harold M. Rose Award for Anti-Racism Research and Practice, and the American Studies Association Richard A. Yarborough Award, amongst others. She is the author of Golden Gulag: Prisons, Surplus, Crisis, and Opposition in Globalizing California published by UC Press. Read Professor Gilmore’s New York Times feature: https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/17/magazine/prison-abolition-ruth-wilson-gilmore.html

Dr. Clarence Lusane is an author, activist, scholar, and journalist. He is a Professor and former Chairman of Howard University’s Department of Political Science. Lusane earned his B.A. in Communications from Wayne State University and both his Masters and Ph.D. from Howard University in Political Science. He’s been a political consultant to the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation and a former Commissioner for the DC Commission on African American Affairs. He frequently appears on MSNBC and CSPAN, and was invited by the Obama’s to speak at the White House. Author of many books, including The Black History of the White House and his most recent book 20 Dollars and Change (published by City Lights), Lusane lives and works in the Washington, DC area.

This event is made possible by support from the City Lights Foundation. To learn more visit: https://citylights.com/foundation/

Praise for the work of Ruth Wilson Gilmore

“Ruth Gilmore, indefatigable activist-scholar, is one of our most dangerous and important minds. A radical geographer with roots in the Black liberation movement of the 1960s and 1970s, she pioneered the study of mass incarceration’s catastrophic impacts on inner-city families and neighborhoods, and together with Angela Davis has played a catalytic role in the creation of today’s movement for prison abolition. This powerful collection of essays is an indispensable conceptual armory for that struggle.” – Mike Davis

“Ruthie’s clarity and courage is a talisman for these monstrous times, and a guide out of them.” – Vijay Prashad, director, Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research

“Abolition geography isn’t shallow romanticism. It is a rigorous criticism of capitalist social relations, which foment premature death and needless suffering of the poor and destroy the planet. Abolition geography is a human necessity for there to be freedom and a livable earth. Ruth Wilson Gilmore, one of the foremost revolutionary thinkers on abolition, draws on real historical traditions of getting free, showing us what is possible and necessary.” – Nick Estes, author of Our History Is the Future

“This well-crafted assemblage of thirty years worth of Ruthie Gilmore’s countless, brilliant interventions is a tremendous gift to our movements. While tending to grounded practices and particularities, Ruthie’s meticulous mapping of interconnected histories offers us prescient analyses across scale, geography, and time. At a time of incredible uncertainty and global upheaval, Abolition Geography illuminates a political vocabulary and vision that reorganizes even conventional left ideologies; a tour de force and absolute must read for our collective trajectories of freedom making as world making.” – Harsha Walia, author of Border and Rule and Undoing Border Imperialism

“The leaderly wisdom of Ruth Wilson Gilmore infuses this hefty volume, making it an indispensible compendium of practical abolitionism. In her hands, reducing police powers and dismantling the prison industrial complex become immediate matters of political struggle. If you want to come to terms with the movement that shaped the ‘American Summer’ of 2020, this is the best available starting point.” – Paul Gilroy, author of The Black Atlantic

“Ruth Wilson Gilmore is one of the most impactful radical thinkers of our time. This compilation of thirty years’ worth of essays, interviews, and co-written reflections, is evidence of the depth and breadth of her extraordinary political praxis. Powerful, provocative, inspiring and inciting, this edited collection offers a formidable indictment of racial capitalism and the carceral state, a deep, complex and multi-faceted portrait of abolitionist work, and a call to action. Readers concerned with freedom-making and liberation will read this brilliant body of work carefully and act decisively.” – Barbara Ransby, activist, historian and author of several books, including Making All Black Lives Matter and Ella Baker and the Black Freedom Movement

“Abolition Geography is a collection of three decades of Ruth Wilson’s Gilmore’s brilliance in the form of essays and interviews on the politics of abolition as a theorist, researcher and organizer. The result is a precious gift that will be read, studied and cherished for years to come by those of us who believe her when she says to be green we must be red, and to be red our world building must be planetary.” – Leanne Betasamosake Simpson, author of Noopiming: The Cure for White Ladies

“An essential collection of writings from one of the most important thinkers on abolition, geography and racism of our time.” – Karla J. Strand

“Abolition Geography is the first collection of writing by this major thinker, activist, and writer in the fields of racism, geography, and incarceration. The book includes essays, articles, and interviews from the last two decades, covering topics such as the origin of mass incarceration and racial violence and the concept of the ‘anti-state state’.” – Autostraddle

“Anyone with an interest in the critical theory of mass incarceration and social justice can’t miss this first-ever compendium of writing by one of the most brilliant and radical minds in the field. [An] impactful guidebook for a whole new generation looking to join the movement.” – The Chicago Review of Books

“For over three decades, Gilmore’s work has been crucial to the study of policing and prison abolition…Her newest anthology, Abolition Geography: Essays Towards Liberation, includes essays on policing, capitalism and organizing [that] are more critical than ever two years after the largest street mobilization in decades. Expertly assembled by scholars Brenna Bhandar and Alberto Toscano, the anthology reproduces Gilmore’s essays chronologically from 1991 to 2018. The only way to escape the cycles of police violence, protest and retrenchment will be to collectively build popular, abolitionist frameworks for relating to each other. Gilmore’s work helps us move toward that goal.” – Andreas Petrossiants, AJ+

“A geographer by training, Gilmore has a sweeping understanding of prisons and policing, one that approaches the issue at scale… If you haven’t read her yet, it’s a good year to start.” – Lexi McMenamin, Teen Vogue

“A scathing exploration of global systems of oppression through a lens of geography, in which [Gilmore] asserts that freedom and liberation are a physical, tangible place – they’re material conditions, not platitudes and niceties from ultra-rich politicians.” – Kylie Cheung, Jezebel

“Gilmore is clear as a bell: potent and factual on injustice, filled with sharp intelligence and even wit, but also somehow continuously surprising and emotional. With every page, Gilmore forces us to think of race, class, prisons, and the world in entirely new ways.” – Kamil Ahsan, NPR

“Introduced by a stimulating essay by Brenna Bhandar and Alberto Toscano, [Abolition Geography] ranges from theoretical chapters originally published in academic journals to public speeches and interviews conducted with other scholars. This anthology format allows the reader to see how Gilmore introduces, experiments with and then develops ideas in real time, taking us from the 1992 Los Angeles riots to the 2021 neo-fascist attack on the US Capitol building.” – Christopher McMichael, New Frame

“Gilmore’s work is enlightening and informative, a must-read for scholars and activists seeking a complex and interdisciplinary deep dive to effectively drive systemic change…Anyone committed to prison reform and social justice has much to learn from Gilmore’s insights about the cognitive work and tactical organizing required to imagine and build an abolitionist future.” – Maileen Hamto, Seattle Book Review

“Gilmore’s prose is descriptive and direct; it describes a society whose economy has failed too many of its members and whose only solution is to create a police state.” – Ron Jacobs, Counterpunch

“More than explaining or urging any single scalar change in social life, the purpose of Abolition Geography is to develop the ability of its readers to study the transformations of racial capitalism, figure out what to do about them, and follow through with enough patience to withstand the enormity of the task and enough urgency to get it done…Abolition Geography is written to be used.” – Kay Gabriel, Dissent

“Notable book, 2022” – Seminary Co-op

“[Abolition Geography] is only the latest generous and supportive gift from Gilmore to liberation-minded abolitionist movements. This gift seems to be written as a call, an invitation to act and do…Abolition Geography contains fire, grit, and hope as well.” – Brit Schulte, The Avery Review

Type of Event:
Virtual

Registration Required:
Yes

Start Date:
Tuesday, May 23, 2023, 6:00 pm PST

End Date:
Tuesday, May 23, 2023, 7:30 pm PST

Venue:

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