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      <big><span style="font-family:Garamond;
          color:black">Greetings,<o:p></o:p></span></big>
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          style="font-family:Garamond;
          color:black"><o:p> </o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal" style="mso-pagination:none;tab-stops:28.0pt
      56.0pt 84.0pt 112.0pt 140.0pt 168.0pt 196.0pt 224.0pt 3.5in
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      mso-layout-grid-align:none;text-autospace:none"><big><span
          style="font-family:Garamond;
          color:black">This year is quickly winding to a close… but it’s
          been quite a
          busy fall for Minor Compositions, with five new books titles
          released. So
          without any further delay, here’s the information on those:<o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal" style="mso-pagination:none;tab-stops:28.0pt
      56.0pt 84.0pt 112.0pt 140.0pt 168.0pt 196.0pt 224.0pt 3.5in
      280.0pt 308.0pt 336.0pt;
      mso-layout-grid-align:none;text-autospace:none"><big><span
          style="font-family:Garamond;
          color:black"><o:p> </o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span
          style="font-family:Garamond;font-variant:small-caps">Revolutions
in
          Reverse: Essays on Politics, Violence, Art, and Imagination<o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond">David
          Graeber<o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond"><o:p> </o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond">Capitalism
          as we know it
          appears to be coming apart. But as financial institutions
          stagger and crumble,
          there is no obvious alternative. </span><span
          style="font-family:Garamond;
          mso-bidi-font-family:Helvetica">There is good reason to
          believe that, in a
          generation or so, capitalism will no longer exist: for the
          simple reason that
          it’s impossible to maintain an engine of perpetual growth
          forever on a finite
          planet. Yet faced with this prospect, the knee-jerk reaction
          is often to cling
          to what exists because they simply can’t imagine an
          alternative that wouldn’t
          be even more oppressive and destructive. </span><span
          style="font-family:Garamond">The
          political imagination seems to have reached an impasse. Or has
          it?</span><span
          style="font-family:Garamond;mso-bidi-font-family:Helvetica"><o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span
          style="font-family:Garamond;mso-bidi-font-family:Helvetica"><o:p> </o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond">In this
          collection of
          essays David Graeber explores a wide-ranging set of topics
          including political
          strategy, global trade, debt, imagination, violence,
          aesthetics, alienation,
          and creativity. Written in the wake of the anti-globalization
          movement and the
          rise of the war on terror, these essays survey the political
          landscape for
          signs of hope in unexpected places.<o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span
          style="font-family:Garamond;mso-bidi-font-family:Helvetica"><o:p> </o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span
          style="font-family:Garamond;mso-bidi-font-family:Helvetica">At
          a moment when the old assumption about politics and power have
          been irrefutably
          broken the only real choice is to begin again: to create a new
          language, a new
          common sense, about what people basically are and what it is
          reasonable for
          them to expect from the world, and from each other. In this
          volume Graeber
          draws from the realms of politics, art, and the imagination to
          start this
          conversation and to suggest that that the task might not be
          nearly so daunting
          as we’d be given to imagine.<o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond"><o:p> </o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond"><a
            href="http://www.minorcompositions.info/?p=284">More
            information</a><o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond">Buy the
          book <a
href="http://bookstore.autonomedia.org/index.php?main_page=pubs_product_book_info&cPath=71&products_id=677">here</a>
          <o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond"><o:p> </o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond">+++<o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond"><o:p> </o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span
          style="font-family:Garamond;font-variant:small-caps">Communization
and
          its Discontents: Contestation, Critique, and Contemporary
          Struggles<o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond">Edited
          by Benjamin Noys<o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond"><o:p> </o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond">Can we
          find alternatives
          to the failed radical projects of the twentieth century? What
          are the possible
          forms of struggle today? How do we fight back against the
          misery of our
          crisis-ridden present? ‘Communization’ is the spectre of the
          immediate struggle
          to abolish capitalism and the state, which haunts Europe,
          Northern California
          and wherever the real abstractions of value that shape our
          lives are contested.
          Evolving on the terrain of capitalism new practices of the
          ‘human strike’,
          autonomous communes, occupation and insurrection have attacked
          the alienations
          of our times. These signs of resistance are scattered and have
          yet to coalesce,
          and their future is deliberately precarious and insecure.<o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond"><o:p> </o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond">Bringing
          together voices
          from inside and outside of these currents <span
            style="font-variant:small-caps">Communization
            and Its Discontents</span> treats communization as a problem
          to be explored
          rather than a solution. Taking in the new theorizations of
          communization
          proposed by Tiqqun and The Invisible Committee, Théorie
          Communiste,
          post-autonomists, and others, it offers critical reflections
          on the
          possibilities and the limits of these contemporary forms,
          strategies, and
          tactics of struggle.<o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond"><o:p> </o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond"><a
            href="http://www.minorcompositions.info/?p=299">More
            information</a><o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond">Buy the
          book <a
href="http://bookstore.autonomedia.org/index.php?main_page=pubs_product_book_info&cPath=71&products_id=676">here</a>
          <o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond"><o:p> </o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond">+++<o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond"><o:p> </o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span
          style="font-family:Garamond;font-variant:small-caps">19
          & 20: Notes for a New Social Protagonism<o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond">Colectivo
          Situaciones, with
          introductions by Michael Hardt & Antonio Negri<o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond"><o:p> </o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond">New
          book from Colectivo
          Situaciones… an 18<sup>th</sup> Brumaire for the 21<sup>st</sup>
          Century:
          militant research on the December 19<sup>th</sup> and 20<sup>th</sup>,
          2001
          uprisings in Argentina… In the heat of an economic and
          political crisis, people
          in Argentina took to the streets on December 19<sup>th</sup>,
          2001, shouting <i style="mso-bidi-font-style:normal">“¡Qué se
            vayan todos!”</i> These words –
          “All of them out!” – hurled by thousands banging pots and
          pans, struck at every
          politician, economist, and journalist. These events opened a
          period of intense
          social unrest and political creativity that led to the
          collapse of government
          after government. Neighborhoods organized themselves into
          hundreds of popular
          assemblies across the country, the unemployed workers movement
          acquired a new
          visibility, workers took over factories and businesses. These
          events marked a
          sea change, a before and an after for Argentina that resonated
          around the
          world.<o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond"><o:p> </o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond">Colectivo
          Situaciones
          wrote this book in the heat of that December’s aftermath. As
          radicals immersed
          within the long process of reflection and experimentation with
          forms of
          counterpower that Argentines practiced in shadow of neoliberal
          rule, Colectivo
          Situaciones knew that the novelty of the events of December
          19th and 20th
          demanded new forms of thinking and research. This book
          attempts to read those
          struggles from within. Ten years have passed, yet the book
          remains as relevant
          and as fresh as the day it came out. Multitudes of citizens
          from different
          countries have learned their own ways to chant <i
            style="mso-bidi-font-style:
            normal">¡Qué se vayan todos!</i>, from Iceland to Tunisia,
          from Spain to
          Greece, from Tahrir Square to Zuccotti Park. Colectivo
          Situactiones’ practice
          of engaging with movements’ own thought processes resonates
          with everyone
          seeking to think current events and movements, and through
          that to build a new
          world in the shell of the old.<o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond"><o:p> </o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span
          style="font-family:Garamond;color:black"><a
            href="http://www.minorcompositions.info/?p=331">More
            information</a> <o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond">Buy the
          book <a
href="http://bookstore.autonomedia.org/index.php?main_page=pubs_product_book_info&cPath=71&products_id=682">here</a>
          <o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond"><o:p> </o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond">+++<o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond"><o:p> </o:p></span></big></p>
    <big></big><big></big><big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span
          style="font-family:Garamond;font-variant:small-caps">Markets
          Not Capitalism: Individualist Anarchism Against Bosses,
          Inequality, Corporate
          Power, and Structural Poverty<o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond">Ed.
          Gary Chartier &
          Charles W. Johnson<o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond"><o:p> </o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond">Individualist
          anarchists
          believe in mutual exchange, not economic privilege. They
          believe in freed
          markets, not capitalism. They defend a distinctive response to
          the challenges
          of ending global capitalism and achieving social justice:
          eliminate the
          political privileges that prop up capitalists.<o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond"><o:p> </o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond">Massive
          concentrations of
          wealth, rigid economic hierarchies, and unsustainable modes of
          production are
          not the results of the market form, but of markets deformed
          and rigged by a
          network of state-secured controls and privileges to the
          business class. <i style="mso-bidi-font-style:normal">Markets
            Not Capitalism </i>explores the gap
          between radically freed markets and the capitalist-controlled
          markets that
          prevail today. It explains how liberating market exchange from
          state capitalist
          privilege can abolish structural poverty, help working people
          take control over
          the conditions of their labor, and redistribute wealth and
          social power.<o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond"><o:p> </o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond">Featuring
          discussions of
          socialism, capitalism, markets, ownership, labor struggle,
          grassroots
          privatization, intellectual property, health care, racism,
          sexism, and
          environmental issues, this unique collection brings together
          classic essays by
          leading figures in the anarchist tradition, including Proudhon
          and Voltairine
          de Cleyre, and such contemporary innovators as Kevin Carson
          and Roderick Long.
          It introduces an eye-opening approach to radical social
          thought, rooted equally
          in libertarian socialism and market anarchism.<o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond"><o:p> </o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal" style="mso-pagination:none;tab-stops:28.0pt
      56.0pt 84.0pt 112.0pt 140.0pt 168.0pt 196.0pt 224.0pt 3.5in
      280.0pt 308.0pt 336.0pt;
      mso-layout-grid-align:none;text-autospace:none"><big><span
          style="font-family:Garamond;mso-ansi-language:EN-GB"
          lang="EN-GB"><a
            href="http://www.minorcompositions.info/?p=230">More
            information</a><o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal" style="mso-pagination:none;tab-stops:28.0pt
      56.0pt 84.0pt 112.0pt 140.0pt 168.0pt 196.0pt 224.0pt 3.5in
      280.0pt 308.0pt 336.0pt;
      mso-layout-grid-align:none;text-autospace:none"><big><span
          style="font-family:Garamond;
          color:black">Buy <a
href="http://bookstore.autonomedia.org/index.php?main_page=pubs_product_book_info&cPath=71&products_id=672">here</a><o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal" style="mso-pagination:none;tab-stops:28.0pt
      56.0pt 84.0pt 112.0pt 140.0pt 168.0pt 196.0pt 224.0pt 3.5in
      280.0pt 308.0pt 336.0pt;
      mso-layout-grid-align:none;text-autospace:none"><big><span
          style="font-family:Garamond;
          color:black"><o:p> </o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal" style="mso-pagination:none;tab-stops:28.0pt
      56.0pt 84.0pt 112.0pt 140.0pt 168.0pt 196.0pt 224.0pt 3.5in
      280.0pt 308.0pt 336.0pt;
      mso-layout-grid-align:none;text-autospace:none"><big><span
          style="font-family:Garamond;
          color:black">+++<o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal" style=""><big><span style="font-family:
          Garamond; color: black;"><o:p> <br>
          </o:p></span></big></p>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span
          style="font-family:Garamond;font-variant:small-caps">Undressing
the
          Academy, or The Student Handjob<o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond">University
          of Strategic
          Optimism<o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond"><o:p> </o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond">The
          weary student
          handbook genre is in need of a belligerent mauling. This is
          our crack at the
          job. We don’t want to talk down to anyone, but neither do we
          want to chat them
          up, so this is an attempt at thinking out the university from
          our own
          perspective, that of students. Here we air our dirty snapshot
          of the academy,
          at least semi-naked, just as we come across it. This potted
          guide is our pot
          shot at undressing and dressing down this place, the
          university, and
          understanding our place within it: its problems and potential,
          its
          power-relations and its possibilities for politicization. This
          is our attempt
          to share some of the knowledge to be gleaned in the
          university, but a knowledge
          that is rarely measured on any certificate come graduation
          day.<o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond"><o:p> </o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond">Written
          collectively by
          the University for Strategic Optimism, in the queasy come-down
          afterglow of the
          recent wave of student activism in the UK (but looking forward
          to cracking-off
          another round), this guide attempts to contextualize our
          struggle and to bring
          it closer to home. Just what is the university that we are
          fighting for anyway?
          And what perhaps could it be?<o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond"><o:p> </o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond"><a
            href="http://www.minorcompositions.info/?p=272">More
            information</a><o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond">Buy the
          book <a
href="http://bookstore.autonomedia.org/index.php?main_page=pubs_product_book_info&cPath=71&products_id=681">here</a>
          <o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal"><big><span style="font-family:Garamond"><o:p><br>
          </o:p></span></big></p>
    <p class="MsoNormal" style="mso-pagination:none;tab-stops:28.0pt
      56.0pt 84.0pt 112.0pt 140.0pt 168.0pt 196.0pt 224.0pt 3.5in
      280.0pt 308.0pt 336.0pt;
      mso-layout-grid-align:none;text-autospace:none">+++<br>
      <big><span style="font-family:Garamond;
          color:black"><o:p><br>
          </o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal" style="mso-pagination:none;tab-stops:28.0pt
      56.0pt 84.0pt 112.0pt 140.0pt 168.0pt 196.0pt 224.0pt 3.5in
      280.0pt 308.0pt 336.0pt;
      mso-layout-grid-align:none;text-autospace:none"><big><span
          style="font-family:Garamond;
          color:black">The line up for 2012 is looking quite good as
          well, with
          forthcoming collections on punk rock and the academy, a
          re-mixable version of <i style="mso-bidi-font-style:normal">Utopia</i>,
          reflections on the occupation
          movements, and an autonomist reworking of the history of the
          avant-garde. Stay
          tuned for more soon, and have a happy winterval!<o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal" style="mso-pagination:none;tab-stops:28.0pt
      56.0pt 84.0pt 112.0pt 140.0pt 168.0pt 196.0pt 224.0pt 3.5in
      280.0pt 308.0pt 336.0pt;
      mso-layout-grid-align:none;text-autospace:none"><big><span
          style="font-family:Garamond;
          color:black"><o:p> </o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal" style="mso-pagination:none;tab-stops:28.0pt
      56.0pt 84.0pt 112.0pt 140.0pt 168.0pt 196.0pt 224.0pt 3.5in
      280.0pt 308.0pt 336.0pt;
      mso-layout-grid-align:none;text-autospace:none"><big><span
          style="font-family:Garamond;
          color:black">Cheers<o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal" style="mso-pagination:none;tab-stops:28.0pt
      56.0pt 84.0pt 112.0pt 140.0pt 168.0pt 196.0pt 224.0pt 3.5in
      280.0pt 308.0pt 336.0pt;
      mso-layout-grid-align:none;text-autospace:none"><big><span
          style="font-family:Garamond;
          color:black">Stevphen<o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal" style="mso-pagination:none;tab-stops:28.0pt
      56.0pt 84.0pt 112.0pt 140.0pt 168.0pt 196.0pt 224.0pt 3.5in
      280.0pt 308.0pt 336.0pt;
      mso-layout-grid-align:none;text-autospace:none"><big><span
          style="font-family:Garamond;
          color:black"><o:p> </o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal" style="mso-pagination:none;tab-stops:28.0pt
      56.0pt 84.0pt 112.0pt 140.0pt 168.0pt 196.0pt 224.0pt 3.5in
      280.0pt 308.0pt 336.0pt;
      mso-layout-grid-align:none;text-autospace:none"><big><span
          style="font-family:Garamond;
          font-variant:small-caps;color:black">--<o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal" style="mso-pagination:none;tab-stops:28.0pt
      56.0pt 84.0pt 112.0pt 140.0pt 168.0pt 196.0pt 224.0pt 3.5in
      280.0pt 308.0pt 336.0pt;
      mso-layout-grid-align:none;text-autospace:none"><big><span
          style="font-family:Garamond;
          font-variant:small-caps;color:black">:: MinorCompositions ::<o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal" style="mso-pagination:none;tab-stops:28.0pt
      56.0pt 84.0pt 112.0pt 140.0pt 168.0pt 196.0pt 224.0pt 3.5in
      280.0pt 308.0pt 336.0pt;
      mso-layout-grid-align:none;text-autospace:none"><big><span
          style="font-family:Garamond;
          color:black"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://www.minorcompositions.info">http://www.minorcompositions.info</a><o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
    <big>
    </big>
    <p class="MsoNormal" style="mso-pagination:none;tab-stops:28.0pt
      56.0pt 84.0pt 112.0pt 140.0pt 168.0pt 196.0pt 224.0pt 3.5in
      280.0pt 308.0pt 336.0pt;
      mso-layout-grid-align:none;text-autospace:none"><big><span
          style="font-family:Garamond;
          color:black">Wivenhoe // New York // Port Watson<o:p></o:p></span></big></p>
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