<html><body style="word-wrap: break-word; -webkit-nbsp-mode: space; -webkit-line-break: after-white-space; ">Saturday, May 17<br>7:00 pm<br>BOOK PARTY / FORUM<br>Lucy Parsons Center<br><br>Nowtopia<br>How Pirate Programmers, Outlaw Bicyclists & Vacant-lot Gardeners are<br>Inventing the Future Today<br><br>Chris Carlsson<br><br>Outlaw bicycling, urban permaculture, biofuels, free software, even the<br>Burning Man festival, are windows into a <br>scarcely visible social transformation that challenges politics as we know<br>it. As capitalism continues its inexorable <br>push to corral every square inch of the globe into its logic of money and<br>markets, new practices are emerging that <br>are redefining politics. In myriad ways, people are taking back their time<br>and technological know-how from the <br>market and in small under-the-radar ways, are making life better right now.<br>In doing so, they hope to set the <br>foundation--technically and socially--for a genuine movement of liberation<br>from market life. The social networks <br>thus created, and the practical experience of cooperating outside of<br>economic regulation, become a breeding ground <br>for new strategies and tactics to confront the everyday commodification to<br>which capitalism reduces us all.<br><br>In Nowtopia, Chris Carlsson uncovers resistance and rebellion amidst<br>fractions of a slowly recomposing working <br>class in America. Rarely self-identifying as mere "workers," people from<br>all walks of life are doing incredible <br>amounts of work in their "free" "non-work" time in order to create<br>immediate practical improvements in daily life. <br>And, these myriad initiatives constitute a thorough-going refusal of<br>politics and economics as usual. In Nowtopia, <br>Marx's concept of the General Intellect is freshly applied to the disparate<br>initiatives that are percolating largely out of <br>public sight. Building on the investigative methodology developed by<br>autonomist Marxists in Europe and the U.S.A., <br>Carlsson recontextualizes the so-called "middle class" as an example of<br>working class recomposition. With the <br>practical rebellions outlined in this book, Carlsson posits a deeper<br>challenge to the basic epistemological <br>underpinnings of modern life, as a new ecologically-driven politics emerges<br>from below to reshape our assumptions <br>about science, technology and human behavior.<br><br>Chris Carlsson is a San Francisco author, Nowtopian, outlaw bicyclist and<br>wannabe vacant-lot gardener. He has <br>edited four collections of political and historical essays. His most recent<br>book, After The Deluge, is a utopian novel <br>of post-economic San Francisco. He was one of the original founders and<br>long-time editor of Processed World <br>magazine. He also helped to start the Critical Mass bicycling movement in<br>San Francisco.<br><br>The Lucy Parsons Center<br>549 Columbus Ave<br>Boston's South End<br><a href="http://www.lucyparsons.org/">www.lucyparsons.org</a><br></body></html>