4.8 • 1.5K Ratings
🗓️ 13 March 2021
⏱️ 138 minutes
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0:00.0 | This episode of The Dig is brought to you by our listeners who support us at patreon.com |
0:05.4 | and by West Virginia University Press, which has loads of great titles, |
0:10.5 | perfect for dig listeners like you. One that you might like is so much to be angry about. |
0:16.6 | Appalachian Movement Press and Radical DIY Publishing, 1969-1979 by Sean Slyther. |
0:24.9 | In a remarkable act of recovery, so much to be angry about conjures an influential but largely |
0:31.1 | obscured strand in the nation's radical tradition. The movement printing presses and publishers |
0:37.2 | of the late 1960s and 70s. More than a history, Sean Slyther's craft and activist-centered book |
0:44.0 | positions the frontline politics of the Appalachian Left within larger movements of the 1970s. |
0:50.8 | So much to be angry about combines complete reproductions of five of Appalachian movement presses |
0:57.2 | most engaging publications and an essay by Sean Slyther about his detective work resurrecting |
1:04.2 | depresses fascinating history. So much to be angry about. Appalachian Movement Press and Radical |
1:11.2 | DIY Publishing, 1969-1979 by Sean Slyther, out now from West Virginia University Press. |
1:29.6 | Welcome to the Dig, a podcast from Jacobin Magazine. My name is Daniel Denver and I'm broadcasting |
1:36.4 | from Providence, Rhode Island. It's entirely clear that all meaningful progress is impossible |
1:43.2 | without an organized working class, a working class organized into labor unions. |
1:49.4 | Unfortunately, the labor movement has faced decades of devastating setbacks, |
1:54.8 | losing millions of members thanks to a bipartisan toward towards neoliberalism, |
1:59.2 | a coordinated corporate offensive against the New Deal settlement, and most recently, |
2:04.8 | the rise of apps like Uber, Lyft, and DoorDash which use technology to mystify their actual |
2:10.0 | achievement, which is the mass casualization of labor, all of that and more. This week's Dig comes |
2:17.2 | in two parts. This episode is an interview with labor journalist Alex Press and organizer |
2:23.4 | Jonah Furman, a big picture assessment of the state of the labor movement, how we got here, |
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