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Mindful occupation: rising up without burning out

Author: Mindful Occupation (Organization).


This booklet was made by a group of radical mental health activists from all over North America - Back cover. Includes bibliographical references (pages 79-82).

Mend my dress

Author: Chestnut, Neely Bat.


Full title: Mend my dress: collected zines 2005-2007
"A collection of zines Neelybat wrote in 2005 through 2007. Includes Mend My Dress 1-6, the one shot Dead Stepdad, in English and Spanish and her half of a split called Grit and Glitter. Chestnut's Zines are well respected in the zine community and her zines cover issues ranging from incest, self-harm, the riot grrrl movement, feminism, friendship, fairytale, and healing as she reflects on her childhood and coming-of-age." - Publisher's description.


Table of Contents:
Introduction
Mend my dress 1
Dear stepdad
Querido padrastro
Mend my dress 2
Mend my dress 3: (the little match girl)
Mend my dress 4: (leporiphobia: fear of rabbits)
Grit and glitter
Mend my dress 5: girl love, girl revolution
Mend my dress 6: bathed in blood.

Shotgun seamstress

Author(s): Atoe, Osa.


Introduction by Golnar Nikpour. Contains reprints of no. 1 (2006)-6 (2011) of the zine Shotgun seamstress. Shotgun Seamstress discusses the difficulties of being a black person within dominantly white punk and queer scenes. The author and contributors give anecdotes about their experiences at punk concerts. Osa interviews local punk artists of color, and provides excerpts of her own writing about racism. The zine incorporates images and sparse typewritten sections for a dynamic effect on each of the pages. Multiple issues have been produced, each focusing on a different aspect of black punk culture (e.g. Toni Young, love, money) and how people of color interact with popular culture.

Organizing cools the planet

Author: Moore, Hilary; Other Author(s): Russell, Joshua Kahn.


Full title: Organizing cools the planet: tools and reflections to navigate the climate crisis
Includes bibliographical references.

Railroad semantics. #5

Author: Dactyl, Aaron.


Fraizier Landslide - Pasco's Hump - Scenic Sub - Read more books in Seattle - Cascade Tunnel - Marshall Canyon - The Scablands - Spokane - Ainsworth jct. - Coalca - Argo Yard - Brooklyn Sub ... - Cover. "Railroad Semantics is no less a high spirited an adventure to read than the train hopping it describes. You are swept along as you precariously climb aboard and jumble down the tracks with Aaron Dactyl and his fellow travelers. As the story unfolds and you become familiar with the terrain in the fascinating pictures contained herein, you can't help but imagine you're one of the animated characters riding along as you attempt to avoid detection. Before long it's one of your tags Aaron spots and photographs under a bridge or on the walls of the box cars he uses to traverse from the snowy white capped peaks to the tree lined valley floor on his way north and south between cities. The morning dew dripping from the rail yard's grassy meadows signifies it's time to navigate the maze of tracks to catch the next train. Sometimes you must take flying leaps of faith from the cars onto the rocky ground below in order to out run the authorities. But by the end you're waving goodbye to your new friend to return to your mundane life, anticipating his return." - From publisher

Solidarity unionism at Starbucks

Author: Gross, Daniel.
Other Author(s): Lynd, Staughton.


Legendary legal scholar Staughton Lynd teams up with influential labor organizer Daniel Gross in this exposition on solidarity unionism, the do-it-yourself workplace organizing system that is rapidly gaining prominence around the county and around the world. - From back of book


Table of Contents:
A Booklet Series on Practicing Solidarity Unionism?
About the Authors
I. Introduction
II. In the beginning
III. Starbucks Workers Union (SWU)
IV. Update.

MOSS: perspectives on Portland's Environment

Author(s): Logan, Emily,


Summer 2010 "Moss is a zine based in Portland, Oregon that features fiction and nonfiction about a single environmental topic in each issue. This issue focuses on water, serving as a primer and treatise about the political and ethical issues involved in an urban area like Portland. There's a story told through an interview between an activist behind bars and an Oregonian reporter. Another bit chronicles a young journalists attempt to cover a story he didn't yet feel qualified for - endangered salmon and a logging company leaking sediment into the stream. It was a young man's lesson about ecology firsthand and how dire the consequences are for our environment. There's also a guide to setting up your own rain garden, a mild amount of poetry, restoration of the Klamath River valley basin water supply, the diminished quality of Portland's drinking water supply, and so much. It's a rushing, fascinating journey here, folks!" - From publisher

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