READINGS FOR TUESDAY LECTURE: A Poetics of Spatial Practice: Situationism, The Derive, & Complicating Notions of Textuality & Performance

 

CLINIC FOR VESTIGIAL ORGAN STIMULATION

DEFINITION Recovery of the senses and physiological functions excluded as the body sealed around itself. Trace physiologies engaging faint physical environments.

Online I titled this lecture “The Poetics of Spatial Practice,” but I might as well have borrowed from Robert Kocik and titled it So very little longing for that which is not.

Untried verbs

Comic Warfare Training Center – Appropriating the zero sum terms of military strategy for expediting comic (drastically fortunate) civilian outcomes.

BUREAU OF MISSING BEHAVIORS

DEFINITION Just as certain building types remain missing because their functions are yet unknown, certain functions are unknown because their behaviors are still untried. Which way of acting will bring about an unbelievable benefit? All the disciplines of the fictitiousness of the­ater used to attain real being.

Overcoming Fitness, while in some ways entirely unique to any history of poetry & poetics, has its roots in Situationism, which has its roots firmly planted in Marxisim, or, for our purposes, Adorno’s ideas about the Schema of Mass Culture and the Culture Industry in paticular:

PRIOR TO GIVING A BIT OF BACKGROUND ON SITUATIONISM and THE OTHER WORK YOU’VE READ, let’s take 5 mintues to write:

–First, write down what is for you an “untried verb”

–Now, use this verb to respond to the question: What untried behavior, or, as Kocik puts it also, what is it that is not, that you long for—or upon reflection now, just now decide you should long for?

TAKE A FEW RESPONSES

Remember I put on the board last Thursday 2 spectra:

1) ‘POLITICAL’ POETRY’S FORMAL STRATEGIES OF CRITIQUE, AFTER ADORNO

(MIMESIS and AMPLIFICATION of the NORMATIVE) —————– (ANTI-MIMESIS)

Completely Found/Appropriated Language—————————emancipatory linguistic forms

2) ‘POLITICAL’ POETRY’S  ENVIRONMENTAL/SPATIAL PRACTICES

Guerilla Poetry———————————————————————-Poets Theater

(unknown audience, accidental

audience, usually public, eg street theater)———————————-(the coterie, priv. aud. house

                                                                                                            theater that is in a constant state

                                                                                                            of becoming, re-imagining/re-

                                                                                                            radicalizing one-another)

This is NOT a pair of dichotomies, but what can be thought of as a working model, a pair of spectra that both captures a lot of what contemp. political poetry wrestles with, and yet also this framing, like any framing, omits, leaves out, or otherwise constricts other practices—in this way the model also CALLS ATTENTION to that which it omits.

THIS MAPPING PROCESS, SIMPLE THAT IT IS, CAN BE THOUGHT OF AS SITUATIONIST-LIKE INSOFAR AS IT IS NOT MEANT TO EXPLAIN OR TO BE A FINAL THEORY BUT IS MEANT TO BE CAST ASIDE ONCE MADE, CAST ASIDE IN FAVOR OF NEW MODELS AND NEW BEHAVIORS. KOCIK expresses interest in POETRY RE-THINKING ITSELF THIS WAY TOO.

SITUATIONISM:

–Reached apex during 68 Strikes, started as tuition hike strikes, fyi

–Guy Debord was one of the founding members, and was the last remaining Situationist prior to the collective’s dissolving in the early 70s.

– ideas rooted in Marxism and the 20th century European artistic avant-gardes, very much taking on board Adorno’s writings, especially his imminent critique of the culture industry, sought to take this work into a sphere of activism.

When one thinks of what Debord describes as the Spectacle, one might—and one would be right to—think of the Culture Industry, now psychologized, and now yet potentially not as impervious to revolutionary thought thru art as Adorno seemed to feel.  Thus the quote at the beginning of Preliminary Problems:

“The construction of situations begins beyond the ruins of the modern spectacle. It is easy to see how much the very principle of the spectacle — nonintervention — is linked to the alienation of the old world. Conversely, the most pertinent revolutionary experiments in culture have sought to break the spectators’ psychological identification with the hero so as to draw them into activity. …The situation is thus designed to be lived by its constructors. The role played by a passive or merely bit-part playing ‘public’ must constantly diminish, while that played by those who cannot be called actors, but rather, in a new sense of the term, ‘livers,’ must steadily increase.”

–advocated experiences of life being alternative to those admitted by the capitalist order, for the fulfillment of human desires buried by capitalist (or for Kocik, fitness-obsessed) cultures, and the pursuing of a superior passional quality.

–For this purpose they suggested and experimented with the construction of situations, namely the setting up of environments favorable for the fulfillment of such desires. Using methods drawn from the arts, they developed a series of experimental fields of study for the construction of such situations, like unitary urbanism and psychogeography.

–I had us look at psychogeography, because here, the simple ideas of the Derive, the “controlled drift” emphasize very clearly that the page, the written, is a crucial site of activation for poets influenced by Situationist practices, learning, and radicalization, but it exists in, facilitates, and results from, the setting up of a larger AESTHETIC ECOSYSTEM, an environment that would or will be favorable to exchanges that are divorced from, as we talked about during the Adorno lecture, pure exchange.  To get outside of that system, one builds another system, one that is temporary.

–What are some of the features of the situation—the derive for example, or the situation generally as outlined by Debord?

–Watch Elrick VIDEO

 Write about some of the features of this film: what are some of the formal strategies being employed here, the form and content of the video poem that COMPLICATE OR EVEN FALSIFY THE 2 SPECTRA ABOVE?

–How do Bey and Kocik relate here? From Bey’s Poetic Terrorism:

PT is an act in a Theater of Cruelty which has no stage, no rows of seats, no tickets & no walls. In order to work at all, PT must categorically be divorced from all conventional structures for art consumption (galleries, publications, media). Even the guerilla Situationist tactics of street theater are perhaps too well known & expected now.  

–(We have so far, up till now, been conceiving of the poem, or the players in a poets theater piece, as not actively part of a constructed situation, a place, an environment, a larger AESTHETIC ECOSYSTEM).  But what ELSE does this imply, from Bey?

–Enter Kocik.  How might Kocik’s notions here, these omitted behaviors here, STARTING WITH THE UN-NAMEABILITY OF THE TEXT ITSELF (its newness) address or expand upon the political-poetic ideas in Situationism such that they stand less of a chance of falling prey to commodification? Or are we back to Adorno’s deep uncertainty about whether the world is fixed, the order of things too strong for any change?

–Feedback loop: the transitory décor of the situation serves as a feedback loop in some sense.  The poem is constructed along with a situation favorable for it; the total environment serves to ideally radicalize and activate participants, and from there participants will or might create other writings, behaviors, situations, and so forth.

–This is a kind of re-mapping the known world, or MAPPING OF THE OMITTED, and as such, it’s a KIND OF ORGANIZING—Where political and aesthetic actions meet or blur.

–commit one act of poetic terrorism and record this down—write about it before and after, in the form of poetry, notes etc; take up to 1 page to add to Kocik’s list of omissions.

———————-

Dear All,

Here are the numerous but (each of them) very short readings for Tuesday lecture.  PLEASE CAREFULLY READ ALL THE READINGS, including VIEWING THE ELRICK VIDEO.  Be prepared to discuss both Debord articles, the Kocik article, the short excerpt from Haikm Bey on “Poetic Terrorism,” the Elrick video, and, if we can get to it on Tues, the Templeton.  If we can’t get to the Templeton on Tues, we’ll get to that work on Thurs. and Sat., working with that text in various ways.

Please be on time and prepared for Tuesday’s lectures.  Too many of you were absent Sat.  Attendance is what makes this program possible–this is a COLLABORATIVE EFFORT, where collaboration is key, so your peers are counting on you.  If you cannot make it to class, email your peers, not me.  And some of you have missed more than yesterday already.  As we enter a phase of settling into fixed collaborative groups, your participation is essential.  Please email me if you are concerned about your situation in this program.

Meanwhile, in addition to the readings, remember to send me a) your preferences regarding who you are interested in working with for your group work, etc., and b) your short, 2pp response piece to this week’s materials, starting with the Adorno lecture, ending with yesterdays work.

See you ALL on Tuesday. 

Solidarity,

David

Preliminary Problems in Constructing a Situation:  HERE and below:

http://library.nothingness.org/articles/SI/en/display/313

Theory of the Derive:  HERE and below:                                              

http://library.nothingness.org/articles/all/en/display/314

Laura Elrick, “Stalk” (video):  HERE and below

Robert Kocik, from Overcoming Fitness: PDF attached to your email ( starts on pg 62 till end of article in the Ecopoetics Journal pdf). Below, as optional/additional reading is the introduction to that same work, so that you have 2 excerpts from what ended up being a very short but very generative book under the same title, Overcoming Fitness.

FOR THURS AND LATER:

Toscano, Donovan, and others on “What Poets Theater Is/Might Be (Now) – this article I will not discuss on Tuesday, but we’ll work with it some on Thursday”:

http://www.poetryfoundation.org/harriet/2010/04/what-is-poets-theater/

INTRODUCING OVERCOMING FITNESS (part of same book as the pdf excerpt)

Robert Kocik

 

What do I have against fitness) Hash’t fitness gotten us this far? It must be doing something right. Why would I rule it out) Why would I claim that its contrary is as credible) What’s so bad about being adept) Why promote ineptitude) There are different types of fitness:

 

* evolutionary fitness. As in survival of the fittest, life’s inherent eugenics which goes by the name of Natural Selection. The lifeform editorial tasks that meddling, sentimental, error prone, self-interested, low fidelity creatures have naturally been spared. I place evolutionary fitness at the top of the list because it often serves as general model for other phenomena-as indubitable evidence for the ways in which things work, why things are the way they are and why they can’t be otherwise-ohen corroborating questionable social behaviors such as

‘getting ahead’ ‘watching out for number one, ‘dog eat dog’ and ‘free trading’.

 

* social fitness. The view that the bright and strong and qualified rightfully find their way to the top. Today we say “survival of the best-informed”. Equal opportunity as enlightenment.

market fitness Or capitalism. Business behavior is self-regulating because the best product at the bestprice will prevail. Anywhere prices are going up, the market has been restrained. Market fitness is an incentive safeguard and spur (in sharp contrast to the sluggishness of social isms).

 

* fitness fusion.  Fusion of social/politicaVeconomic sectors as Market Democracy. With the demise ofcommunism, Market Democracy has become the dominant political system. And, like dominant lifeforms, a dominant political form’ spreads’.

 

* synthetic fitness. Surgery, bioengineering, gene therapy, pharmacogenetics, medical treatment in general. Saving and prolonging lives. spiritual eugenics Only those who merit salvation will be saved. Only the moral will know peace of mind. Competing paradises.

 

* radst fitness. Fitness is out to win. Taken to its extreme it leads to the notion of supremacy-what Dr Martin Luther King Jr. referred to as the drum major instinct-to be out ahead of all the others. The race-based collective version of this form of fitness

is of course ‘racism’.

 

* physical fitness. Staying in shape. The vanity of looking good. Because I am a manual laborer, I tend to think of physical fitness as the pre or post workday training programs of others. (As vitaminsare to food, fitness is to lifestyle). An indication of lopsided living; just as I have a shortage of sedentary time-seated at a desk, lounging, lying on the grass, lotus like. Enough resources to be maladaptive. Money to burn. Fat to burn off.

 

* subtle fitness. Fitness overcome. Fitness can be viewed as benign or malign. According to the friendly version, fitness keeps us on our toes. It keeps re-sharpening the cutting edge. life under fitness is robust. A little worker insecurity is good for the economy. According to the cruel version, fitness is a deeply rooted, distrustful, ruthless behavior based on elimination of

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Sat Week 3 Language Lab, What to Bring

Dear All,

For tomorrow (Sat, Week 3) please bring:

–your Artaud pieces (both the initial poems and then the further re-working of the writing for 3 people)

–your Cha pieces (the found poem / research poem, as well as your write up on how you would perform this work)

–your collective 8 line poems (the cutups you did Thurs.) as well as any writings or notes your group has made regarding how this piece should be performed.

–your readings for the week (the Jenna Osman Jacket essay, etc)

Please be prepared to share this work as well as to discuss it further.  Also be prepared for a 2nd half of working directly on questions pertaining to what you’re envisioning regarding your writing projects, how you’d like to collaborate or how you think you ought to collaborate, etc.

FINALLY: PLEASE REMEMBER TO BRING FOOD FOR POTLUCK!

I’ll be posting the readings for Tuesday soon.  Hopefully by tomorrow, and as always, by Sun. night.

Best,

David

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Readings for Week 3

A reminder about the play we’ll be discussing on Tuesday: Susan Parenti’s Mannifold. We handed out copies in class on Saturday. If you weren’t there, please arrange to borrow a copy from one of your classmates.

  For more on Susan, who is one of the visiting artists working with the “Social Change” program, click here:
http://www.patchadams.org/bio_Susan_Parenti

  And please read the Jena Osman article available here:
http://jacketmagazine.com/32/p-osman.shtml

It’s unlikely we’ll be discussing the Osman article on Tuesday, but have it read just in case, and make sure to bring a copy to class with you on Thursday.

Also for Thursday, make sure to bring the results of your research and poetic responses to the anthology selections by Theresa Hak Kyung Cha.

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Sat Language Lab Week 2

Hi All,

These days are crucial, so please be in class and on time.  (Not that Tues and Thurs are not crucial, as they determine what we do on Sat., but…)

Please bring your 15 minute poetry => performative translation of (for 3 people, using elements of Artuad’s Theater of Cruelty); bring your Thalia Field translations; and please bring your Anthologies along with your thoughts on the short readings assigned.  

We’ll do a lot of small group work, followed by some casual play/presentation work at end.  This is our chance to build small, finished pieces for our portfolios (in addition to your individual writings), but it’s also a crucial chance for you to work directly with different collaborators–this will help you get a feel for who you might want to work with, even what sort of collaborative project you want to do for weeks 5-10.

Solidarity,

David

ps: check out the stuff below!  Pete and friends (some are your classmates) have helped build some incredibly important panels for the Latin American Solidarity Conference below, and I’m sure the other events are very worth while, so…! I venture to say that there is no way poetry can avoid (or should avoid) somehow dealing with/confronting globalization and neoliberalism.  Among newer world countries, many Latin American countries have some of the oldest and most opportunistic/colonial trade agreements with the U.S. government, and yet these are also countries (Venezuela and Colombia, for instance) where resistance by grassroots organizations has also been the most visible and successful in the past couple decades.  Find out more.

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Weekend Events: Latin American Solidarity Conference &…

Announcements from your program colleagues: 

Next Tuesday 5-8 The Dance Matrix Collective hosts “human jazz” with Christian Swensen:

in the CRC 116- FREE here is his website for samples:http://www.humanjazz.com/. It will be a fully participatory workshop. “Bodies- on” experience, probably dress accordingly? heres also what he says about this creation :

“Ideally, I try to let the body and voice together discover the dansing. Each helping the other articulate my enthusiasm. The sensation is then a mixture of wonder and empathy in seeing oneself birthing an ever-changing landscape; a landscape of the Other, other peoples, species, and elements. In the safety of delight, I create worlds again and again with pulse, tonal and movement qualities akin to dancing, singing and acting for this is where we play and pretend. As a tribe of one I open this window for us to taste the ageless winds. “
Christian Swenson, Creator of Human Jazz, the unique music/dance/drama form.

FROM WEST COAT TO WEST BANK, BUILDING BRIDGES:

At the ‘Ethnic Cultural Theatre’ in Seattle from 2-4pm on Wednesday, April 14th. Tickets are FREE and all should come!

http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=112075605485322&ref=mf


From West Coast to West Bank, building bridges between the Occupied and the Undocumented, this event will feature Def Jam Poetry artist MARK GONZALES & Palestinian poet REMI KANAZI

LATIN AMERICAN SOLIDARITY CONFERENCE:

To register, volunteer or see what all the different workshops, speakers and
hoopla is about, check out:
http://www.nwlasconference.wordpress.com

SCHEDULE!
Friday
3-5 p.m. Film: “Communa Under Construction.”
In more than 30,000 Consejos Comunales, the Venezuelan inhabitants decide on
their concerns collectively via assemblies. The film examines the
difficulties of Consejos Comunales and how participation is a learning
process, while examining the progress and setbacks that mark the difficult
process of people taking the power of deciding key elements of their lives
and environment by themselves.
5-7 p.m. Meet and Greet:
As people arrive, we will make arrangements for overnight guests and address
any requests of (directions, etc.) out-of-town people. People will meet,
mingle and set up our main room for the entire conference. There will also
be opportunities to get acquainted in the conference area and set up tables
for group-specific material. Bring decorations for the walls or hang posters
to make this space ours for the next two days.
E1107

7-8:30 p.m. Keynote Speaker: Jesse Freeston
The Real News Network, real journalism that matters, covering the coup in
Honduras.
Freeston is a video-journalist with The Real News Network. He is originally
from Ontario, Canada, but spent most of the last two years reporting from El
Salvador, Honduras, and the U.S. His work has covered a variety of topics
including the military-industrial complex, economics & labor issues, Central
American social movements and resource rights.
This presentation is about Freeston’s essential video journalism covering
the coup in Honduras, specifically the post-coup elections where he
uncovered overwhelming evidence of fraud while the majority of US newspapers
repeated the official story.
E1107

Saturday
8:30-9 a.m. Coffee and Pastries.

9-10:30 a.m. Kickoff Plenary and Introductions
Organization and individual introductions with expectations for the
conference.
Facilitator: Megan Hise from Portland Central American Solidarity Committee
(PCASC).

10:40-12 p.m. Workshop Session 1
. Marxism 101
Carlos Martinez
As coordinator for the Center for Political Education, Martinez helps
present workshops called Marxism 101 — a curriculum utilized for many years
to support grassroots activists in their struggles and learning about
Marxist theory can help us understand the issues we deal with.
E2109

. NW Student Coalition Building and Latin American Solidarity
Rio Collier, Adam Carpinelli, Tyler Bristow, Will Munger
The Northwest Student Coalition is a horizontally structured, student-led
network and interactive forum that aims to bridge intercollegiate
communication of student groups working for social and environmental
justice. The NWSC hopes to foster a more engaged, sustainable student
community that is better equipped to address wider scope campaigns,
coordinate work on environmental and social issues and stay informed about
regional campus updates. Through this network, students and like-minded
faculty can strategize and share resources. NWSC is not aligned to any
specific political party or political ideology and is committed to positive
social change based on justice, democracy and dignity.
B3105

. ALBA “South America’s Idea of Fair Trade”
Chris Beach-Rehner
ALBA (Bolivarian Alliance for the Americas) is a new trade agreement
focusing on the needs of local communities and countries rather than the
flow of capital. Incorporating local non-profit social activist groups,
Venezuela-led ALBA, is in the process of creating a trade agreement
juxtaposed against NAFTA and CAFTA. Learn the success of ALBA in its short
time and the challenges that we face ahead for us as a global community to
be successful in fair trade.
B3107

. The Modern NGO, Pacifism, and Solidarity
Jesse Freeston
Based around an interview with the head of Oxfam’s mining program
coordinator for Central America, the workshop is juxtaposed against a video
from the community he is talking about. The presentation is made up of a
series of video clips, a fully edited video piece, interspliced with
Freeston’s thoughts and plenty of opportunity for participant interaction.
B3109

12-1 p.m. Potluck Lunch Break and Film Showing.
“Until the Last Drop: Tales From the Battle for El Salvador’s Water”
Jason Wallach
Will transnational water companies swallow El Salvador’s water supply? In
his film about water in El Salvador, filmmaker Jason Wallach asks if water
is a human right or a commodity. Watch the film during lunch and Wallach
will answer questions.
E1107

1-2:20 p.m. Workshop Session 2
. Neoliberal globalization and it’s effects on Suriname, El Salvador and
Mexico.
Adam Carpinelli, Natalie Hammerquist, and Ken Hoyt
Adam Carpinelli will discuss field interviews he conducted among the
Saramaka people of Suriname in August 2006 regarding their land rights case
against neoliberal globalization brought before the Organization of American
States. Hammerquist will speak about the history of neoliberal globalization
in Mexico and NAFTA. Hoyt, an organic intellectual, will discuss the history
of El Salvador and its struggle against neoliberalism.
E2109

. Combining allies against imperialism: Latin America and the anti-war
movement combat US militarism
Rio Collier, Mark Vorpahl and Nita Palmer
During a trip to Venezuela last fall, a Northwest delegation learned about
U.S. militarism and aggression against Venezuela. The delegation discovered
a unique response to US military base development in Colombia by Venezuela
building Peace Bases of their own. In this new era of war and occupation,
imperialist countries (with the US at the forefront) are planning not only
in the Middle East and further into Africa, but are extending this war drive
into Latin America. The drastic increase of US military bases in Colombia,
the US-planned coup in Honduras, constant provocation both internally and
externally of Latin American countries such as Venezuela, Bolivia, Ecuador
and beyond urges the anti-war movement to take up a serious expansion of an
anti-war, anti-occupation campaigns to include Latin America.
B3105

. International Accompaniment of Human Rights Defenders
Philip Neff, Network in Solidarity with the People of Guatemala (NISGUA)
Accompaniment deploys trained international observers alongside
organizations and individuals whose work in defense of human rights puts
them at risk of threats, violence, and other human rights violations.
Through monitoring of the human rights context and connections with
international civil society, international accompaniers can provide a
measure of security and support for local human rights defenders who request
their presence. This presentation discusses the principles, practice, and
challenges of accompaniment based on the experience of the Guatemala
Accompaniment Project, which works alongside indigenous and Guatemalan-led
organizations struggling to achieve justice for genocide and resist harmful
development “mega-projects”.
B3107

. How to make a documentary video for your solidarity campaign.
Jason Wallach
Veteran solidarity activist and documentary video producer Jason Wallach
will work with workshop participants to craft a big picture view of
video-making in the context of Latin America solidarity activism. The
workshop will be akin to a graduate seminar. Participants will watch work
samples and discuss technical, thematic and stylistic decisions made by the
director. Special attention will focus on how to tailor a video to a
specific campaign or objectives related to solidarity work.
B3109

2:30-3:50 p.m. Workshop Session 3
. Venezuela’s Socialism for a 21st Century and the call for a 5th
International.
Peter Bohmer and Mark Vorpahl
What is Socialism for a 21st Century? Isn’t Chavez a dictator? Evergreen
State professor Bohmer addresses this and more followed by Vorpahl of
Workers Compass who will discuss the call for a 5th Socialist International.
The first International was called by Marx, the 5th has been called by
Chavez. What will be the significance of a new socialist international?
E2109

. “Free All Political Prisoners NOW!” The Cuban 5 and all US political
prisoners.
Tamara Hansen and Adam Carpinelli
Vancouver(BC)-based organizer Hansen will discuss the case of the Cuban Five
and importance of this campaign within the current situation of political
prisoners in the United States and Vancouver(WA)-based organizer Carpinelli
will discuss the importance of political prisoner support networks and
solidarity in context of work with The Jericho Movement.
B3105

. The Independence and Labor movements in Puerto Rico and the recent general
strikes.
Larry Hildes and Karen Weill
A Bellingham-based legal team will present on current issues facing the
independence and labor movements in Puerto Rico along with the recent
general strikes. The pair recently returned from a solidarity conference and
retreat in Puerto Rico.
B3107

. Face the Displaced: Days of Action for Colombia
Colette Cosner, Witnesses For Peace
A Witness For Peace Regional Organizer, Cosner will give a report back from
her recent delegation to Colombia focusing on trade and militarization. The
presentation will examine U.S. foreign policy and Colombia’s internal
displacement crisis. With nearly five million Colombians forcibly displaced
from their homes by a debilitating war, Colombia is now the second worst
internal displacement crisis in the world. Tens of thousands across the US
and Colombia will participate in this year’s National Days of Action for
Colombia to call for a much-needed shift in US policies toward the war-torn
country. Hundreds of universities, faith communities, and organizations will
assemble thousands of printed faces of Colombia’s displaced people to be
later displayed in poignant, eye-catching displays. Workshop participants
will assemble these displays and organize a exhibition space for them during
the conference.
B3109

3:50-4:15 p.m. Coffee Break.

4:15-5:45 p.m. Keynote Speaker: Carlos Martinez
“Venezuela Speaks! Voices from the Grassroots.”
“Venezuela Speaks! Voices from the Grassroots,” is coauthored by Carlos
Martinez who will speak about grassroots organizing in Venezuela. Martinez
recently served in Venezuela as the program director for Global Exchange
where he coordinated dozens of delegations to Venezuela. Martinez’s articles
have been published in Common Dreams, Monthly Review Zine and on
venezuelanalysis.com.
Martinez lived in Venezuela for two years and now resides in San Francisco,
CA. Currently, he works for the Center for Political Education, where he
organizes Latin America Solidarity events in the Bay Area. Find out more:
politicaleducation.org.
E1107

6 p.m.-2 a.m. The 1st Annual Quinceañero Dance
Dinner starts at 6 p.m. with vegan options! Dancing starts at 8 followed by
a live hip-hop at 9:30! Guest appearances by Asliani, MC ZEM ZEM, and The
Hungry MC’s! There willl be a dance-off contest right before DJs. Drag or
formal attire encouraged. $7 to get in or $10 including dinner. Bring a date
and pay $15 which includes dinner.
Sponsored by C.R.O.W. (Chican@s Resisting Oppression and War)
Eagles Hall (805 4th Ave. E, downtown Olympia, off Plum Street)

Sunday
8:30-9 a.m. Coffee and Pastries.

9-10:30 a.m.Workshop Session 4
. “Shut It Down Now!” The NW Detention Center, Bridges Not Walls and migrant
farm workers.
Ariana, Jenny Lee and Josh Elliott
The NW Detention Center is an immigrant detention facility privately run for
profit by the GEO Corporation in Tacoma. For many years, activists have
provided support for detainees and their families at the detention center
that includes legal aid, moral support and material aid. There are also
large protest marches against the detention center with calls for more to
come. Lee of YaYa will also talk about migrant farmers who often find
themselves in the Detention Center with their families far apart.
E2109

. Material aid caravans: Pastors For Peace and the Honduran military coup
Rick Fellows, Brendan Funtek and Bruce Wilkinson
Fellows has been a mechanic for the Pastors For Peace Cuba Caravan since its
inception. He will discuss his experience in over 60 caravans to Cuba or
Central America along with Funtek, a member of LASO and went on the 2006
caravan. The next Cuba caravan begins July 3 from North America and this
workshop will give information on how to get involved along with other
solidarity travel options to Cuba. Wilkinson will talk about the military
coup in Honduras last year and the current struggle of a social movement
that is facing serious repression with great strength and determination. At
the end of the presentation, we will work with workshop participants on
coming up with a campaign to provide material support for Honduras.
B3107

. Pacific Rim Mining in El Salvador
CISPES
Pacific Rim is suing El Salvador for $77 million due to a loss of potential
profits from a mining operation that the people refused to give permits for.
This Vancouver BC-based company is suing through CAFTA courts via a
Nevada-based subsidiary. The first lawsuit of its kind and CISPES will speak
about their campaign to stop them.
B3109

10:40-11:30 a.m. Strategy Sessions.
Strategy sessions will be determined during Saturday with people
volunteering breakout topics and others signing up for them throughout the
day. Participants will meet in E1107 and then break out into small work
groups, coming back together to post their results on the walls.

11:40 a.m.-1 p.m. Solidarity and campaign-building strategies, future plans.
During this time, we will discuss the results of the strategy sessions and
come up with next steps for making this conference the beginning of a
continued and improved solidarity network effort in the Northwest. We will
discuss specific campaigns, develop a calendar attentive to what
organizations have already planned, create new ways to communicate, share
and develop long lasting alliances.

1-2 p.m. Potluck Lunch Break.

2-4 p.m. Keynote Speaker: Father Roy Bourgeois
A Struggle For Justice In Latin America
SPEAKER BIOGRAPHY: In 1980 Fr. Roy, Maryknoll priest, became involved in
issues surrounding US policy in El Salvador after four US churchwomen – two
of them his friends – were raped and killed by Salvadoran soldiers. After
that experience, Roy became an outspoken critic of US foreign policy in
Latin America. Since then, he has spent over four years in US federal
prisons for nonviolent protests against the training of Latin American
soldiers at Ft. Benning, Georgia.

In 1990, Roy founded the School of Americas Watch, an organization that does
research on the US Army School of the Americas (SOA), now renamed the
Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation or WHINSEC, at Fort
Benning, Georgia. Each year the school trains hundreds of soldiers from
Latin America in combat skills ? all paid for by U.S. taxpayers.

The School of the Americas Watch, located just outside the main entrance of
Fort Benning and in Washington, DC, informs the general public, Congress and
the media about the implications of this training on the people of Latin
America. For the last 10 years there has been a peaceful protest with over
24,000 in attendance.
Lecture Hall 1

4 p.m. Reception For Father Roy Bourgeois
The Evergreen State College Longhouse

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