Comics, Ethics, Politics (4.10.13)

Over at the Hooded Utilitarian, I have an essay relating V for Vendetta and Albert Camus’ The Rebel, specifically as they address the question of unjustifiable means.

That essay can be read, in a way, as a follow-up to my earlier piece on the same site, “Trial By Fire: Mad Max, Rorschach, and the Girl with the Dragon Tattoo.”

And here are some links to my other recent comics-related work:

The Legacy of Anarchy Comics.In These Times. March 5, 2013.

The Graphic Canon, Volume I.” The Comics Journal. January 8, 2013.

Milk and Cheese: Dairy Products Gone Bad!Verbicide. October 26, 2012.

Everyone’s a Critic (April 2013)

It’s been a year since Hurt was released. Here’s a small sample of reviews:

At the Portland Book Review, Sarah Alibabaie writes:

“One will not be able to help but react in accord or discord or at least question along with the arguments raised. . . . Hurt is a good publication that not only introduces but invites the reader to a debate on torture and to imagine alternatives.”

Chris Auman concludes his review for relgarwiglar.com:

“these writings are the result of well-reasoned and researched thinking and go a long way in educating the reader on the causes and underlying factors of torture in the 21st century.”

Meanwhile, Kurt Morris opines at Razorcake:

“It was good to see Williams not reverting to the familiar arguments on everything; tying in torture with police and the U.S. prison system really is quite interesting. However, the apex of Williams’s argument is that getting rid of the apparatuses that allow abuse and torture and working towards an anarchist system is what would solve this despicable practice. … I wondered who would be reading this beyond people who already agreed with the premise and conclusions. Don’t get me wrong: it’s still a very worthwhile topic to discuss, but this discussion needs to move from beyond anarchist circles and into some kind of action. How is that done? Beats me. I just review stuff.”

— So I guess you can’t please everyone.

In other news, The Macinator ran a retrospective review of Our Enemies in Blue:

“This is a book that anyone affected by law enforcement should read, and really, that’s everyone: Protesters, people in ‘urban’ neighborhoods, proponents of ‘community policing,’ officers themselves, and just ‘normal’ people.”

Tom Nomad wrote an interesting survey article of my major works:

“Toward a Counteroperational Theory: A Review of the Works of Kristian Williams.” Tom Nomad. Working USA: The Journal of Labor and Society. September 2012.

It can be found on Sci-Hub.

Community Alternatives to Police (February 2013)

On Tuesday, February 12, I’ll be speaking on a panel discussing alternatives to the police.

Here are the details:
Tuesday, February 12, 2013
5 – 7 pm
PSU Smith Center room 327/328

If you want a preview of what I’ll be talking about, you can tune into KBOO 90.7 FM a day earlier. On Monday, February 11, some time between 9 and 10 am, I’ll be interviewed on The Old Mole.

Grand Jury Resistance (December 2012)

A few weeks ago I participated in an event called “Our Lips are Sealed” about grand jury resistance and withstanding repression more broadly.

In the course of the day, I spoke on two panels, alongside Dennison Williams (no relation), Richard Brown of the SF8, and the Freedom Archives‘ Claude Marks. It was a great and humbling experience to share the stage with these folks, two of whom have done serious time as political prisoners and one who resisted a grand jury subpoena earlier this year but (so far) remains free.

One can hear audio of from the event at the Radio Autonomia website.

I’ve also written about the grand jury for Counterpunch, earlier in the fall (“A Defense of Contempt: The Kafkaesque Case of Matt Duran.” Counterpunch. October 1-15, 2012. Subscription only; sorry!)

At the time Matt Duran was the only northwest grand jury resistor in prison; since then, Kteeo Olejnik and Maddy Pfeiffer have also been imprisoned for refusing to testify before a federal grand jury looking into the anarchist movement.

For more information on the Northwest Grand Jury, visit the Committee Against Political Repression website: https://nopoliticalrepression.wordpress.com/

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