The lives of martin movement. Visionaries was coming your way in just a few moments well be here in the studio taking you through the global headlines to join us again that. The commissioner is me Sophie Shevardnadze the quranic crisis and the need to rethink the way our societies function. Around these im joined by one of the worlds most influential thinkers large interest law for. The legendary philosopher author of pandemic colleague 19 shakes the world ive been wanting to talk to you for the longest time welcome to our program. I do. And i know what you dream beyond these are going to make if you are just too much or with these are both let me be rejected it. Is less so for and this i remember during last years samus debate with jurgen pettersen he said that humanity will continue to slide towards some kind of apocalypse until some major catastrophe awakens us yet these print demick be categorised as successor theme. Not defunding just sad but if one did wed. Already actually then
Cspan2 for filling tonight. Thank you very much. From little bit of history but the strand, was founded in 1927 over on Fourth Avenue as will grow. Stretching from union square to us in place, the probe gradually after over 92 years. Genesis will survive her and still run by the best family from the original family who founded it. Were running hundred events a year nearly. I still have new and used books after all this time. Tonight we are excited to be hosting andrew marantz, author of the brenda book antisocial. An extremist, techno utopians in the hijacking of the american conversation. Andrew has wig written for the new yorker since 2011 it is also appeared in evers new york magazine, jones the New York Times, among others. And contributed to the new yorker radio hour radio lab. Joining him is fellow new yorker staff writer, ensign cunningham. As magazines go critic. His byline has appeared in the New York Times magazines, New York Times magazines, and book review and alter, the ol
Protest, so the struggle of women in. For their rights is a very long story, a very long story, and many years , indeed many women are fighting for their rights in iran, i really hope that soon with the departure of this regime, they will still achieve their goal, what about the protest movement in iran, or somehow, is this resistance to the current iranian government visible . And street protests are not in those on the scale that was last year, and for several months there were none, but on the anniversary of the death of makhsai mina this girl, a twentytwoyearold girl, who was killed by the morality police, and people in many cities, many cities, came out to protest, about twenty cities, but the regime is again very repressive. Suppressed these protests, it is necessary to understand that today the potential of a new wave in society exists, at any moment, for any reason , a second wave of protests may explode. Well, thank you very much, mr. Mazyaar, mazyaar, independent the iranian
A regional and transnational history of anarchism in Korea by Dongyoun Hwang. This book provides a history of anarchism in Korea and challenges conventional views of Korean anarchism as merely part of nationalist ideology, situating the study within a wider East Asian regional context. Following the movement after 1945, Hwang shows how anarchism in Korea was deradicalized and evolved into an idea for both social revolution and alternative national development, with emphasis on organizing and educating peasants and developing rural villages.