
Essay on the multitude of definitions for terrorism and how the term is utilized by the government.
Authors: Steven Best & Anthony J. Nocella, II
Source: Zine Distro
Letter booklet, to print: Defining Terrorism_to print
Essay on the multitude of definitions for terrorism and how the term is utilized by the government.
Authors: Steven Best & Anthony J. Nocella, II
Source: Zine Distro
Letter booklet, to print: Defining Terrorism_to print
Hard to classify, but here’s a pithy quip: “Anarchistic and nihilist ideas are anathema to the information-age, they are the glitch in the database society which escapes classification and control. The imagination walking; dangerous and capable of unforeseen actions and moments of interconnection.”
Source: Counterflow Archive.org
Letter booklet, to print: War Against the Information Age_A Future of Mass Social Control_to print
Graeber examines the role of play in the human, animal, and physical worlds, and explores the nature of freedom.
Author: David Graeber
Source: DavidGraeber.org
Zine Formatting: No Name Distro
Letter booklet, to print: What’s the Point if We Can’t Have Fun?_to print
A brief and thoughtful essay by David Graeber in a one-page zine format on the necessity of re-framing our concept of labor in order to combat climate change.
Author: David Graeber
Source: Anarchist Library
Zine Formatting: No Name Distro
Letter 8-fold mini zine, one page, to print: To Save the World, We’re Going to Have to Stop Working_to print
A preface to a longer essay, this zine examines the modern understanding of “terror,” subversion, and legitimacy in insurrectionary struggles.
Author: Rabble
Source: Anarchist Library
Zine Formatting: No Name Distro
Letter booklet, to print: Thoughts For Proto-Insurgents in the Age of Terrors_to print
An analysis of alienation, commodity fetishism, and the way in which we as workers reproduce the capitalist economy in our everyday lives.
Author: Fredy Perlman
Source: Feral Distro
Letter booklet, to print: The Reproduction of Daily Life_to print
A 1986 essay by Ursula K. Le Guin where she retells the story of human origin by redefining technology as a cultural carrier bag rather than a weapon of domination.
Author: Ursula K. Le Guin
Source: Anarchist Library
Zine Formatting: No Name Distro
Letter booklet, to print: The Carrier Bag Theory of Fiction_to print