Please join us for a virtual conversation on rethinking fascisms and reimagining antifascist movements with professors Alyosha Goldstein and Simón Trujillo.
Co-editors of the 2022 book For Antifascist Futures: Against the Violence of Imperial Crisis (Common Notions Press), Goldstein and Trujillo will discuss what they see as new formations of authoritarian politics in 2025 and possible horizons of resisting against racial capitalist and imperial violence. This event is sponsored by the Centre for Interdisciplinary Studies in Society and Culture, and brought to you by Abolition Worlds and Dark Opacities Lab.
About the speakers
Alyosha Goldstein is professor American Studies at the University of New Mexico. He is the author of Poverty in Common: The Politics of Community Action during the American Century (Duke University Press, 2012), editor of Formations of United States Colonialism (Duke University Press, 2014), and coeditor of For Antifascist Futures: Against the Violence of Imperial Crisis (Common Notion, 2022) and The Cambridge History of Colonialism and Decolonization, volume 4, 1914 – 2001 (in preparation for Cambridge University Press). His book This Colonial Present: Dispossession, Irreparation, and the Gound Not Given is forthcoming from Duke University Press.
Simón Trujillo is assistant professor of English at New York University. His book, Land Uprising: Native Story Power and the Insurgent Horizons of Latinx Indigeneity (University of Arizona Press, 2020), explores Indigenous land reclamation to rethink connections between Native storytelling practices and Latinx racialization across overlapping colonial and nation-state forms. He is also coeditor of For Antifascist Futures: Against the Violence of Imperial Crisis (Common Notion, 2022).