LiP Co-Conspirators
| (This page is meant to be read, not skimmed, or we would have organized it a lot differently, and omitted any allegedly humorous asides. It may also be worth noting that, with the exception of the first three entries, listings are in no particular order). | ||
| Core Conspirators | ||
| Brian
Awehali is the founder and editor of LiP.
His freelance work has appeared in (or on) Z Magazine/ZNet, ColorsNW,
Alternet, The El Dorado Sun, The Black World Today, Tikkun, The Santa
Fe New Mexican, and High Times. He currently
does print production for the Western Prison Project.
He has also worked as a landscaper, graveyard shift grocery stocker, dock
worker, forklift operator, dedicated plasma donor, hilariously miscast
management consultant, door-to-door canvasser, graphic designer, web designer,
and telephone salesperson for Fred Astaire dance studios. He is a tribal
member of the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma. Race
and ethnicity editor Tim
Wise is among the most prominent antiracist writers and
activists in the US, and has been called the “foremost white antiracist
intellectual in the nation.” A collection of Wise’s essays,
Speaking Treason Fluently: Anti-Racist Reflections from an Angry
White Male, is due out in 2004, and he has two other books scheduled
for release in early 2005: White Like Me: Reflections on Race
from a Privileged Son (Soft Skull Press) and Affirmative
Action: Racial Preference in Black and White (Routledge). Contributing
illustrator Tim
Kreider is the creator of the pleasantly perverse cartoon,
The Pain—When Will It End?, published weekly online
at www.thepaincomics.com and in print in the Baltimore City Paper
and the Jackson Planet Weekly. His articles
have appeared in Film Quarterly, the Comics Journal
and right here in LiP. A collection of his cartoons was
published by Fantagraphics Books in May 2004. Contributing
illustrator Shannon
Wheeler is a contributing illustrator to LiP. He is the
creator of Too Much Coffee Man, a nervous, paranoid, jittery satire of
modern life and popular culture—especially superheroes. Shannon
is also the publisher and editor of the Portland-based magazine of the
same name. Chief copy editor A.E. Berkowitz has written for Bitch and Bust, and contributed to the anthology Young Wives’ Tales. She is currently at work on a mystery novel.
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Designer
and production manager Colin
Sagan is a freelance graphic designer. He has worked in no
small capacity with Kitchen Sink magazine, and presently
works as a designer for Ode magazine. In order to finance
the work he gives to magazines like LiP for free, he
is currently harvesting the energy generated by the meowing of feral kittens
that live in his back yard. Editor at
large Lisa
Jervis, who has been described in print as “delightfully
cranky,” is the cofounder and publisher of Bitch: Feminist
Response to Pop Culture. Her work has also appeared in Ms.,
the San Francisco Chronicle, Mother Jones, Salon, Punk
Planet, the Women’s Review of Books, Low
Times: The Journal of Clinical Depression, and Spreadsheet
Slut. She lives in Oakland, California, where she enjoys her
two cats, not bicycling, and refusing to relocate to her hometown of New
York City. Senior editor
Jeff
Conant has
documented and collaborated with grassroots struggles in various countries.
He develops low-literacy popular education materials as coordinator of
the Hesperian Foundation's Environmental Health Book project and has developed
Editorial advisor Guillermo Gómez-Peña was born and raised in Mexico City. He came to the United States in 1978. In his work, which includes performance art, video, audio, installations, poetry, journalism, critical writings and cultural theory, he explores cross-cultural issues and North/South relations. He is the recipient of an American Book Award for New World Border, and has also received the Prix de la Parole, New York’s Bessie Award and a MacArthur Foundation Fellowship. Books
editor KL
Pereira spends way too much time watching TV and then
writing about it. Having finally turned her obsession with pop culture
into a career, she has edited and
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Associate
Editor and Development Consultant Ariane
Conrad has only two titles, but possesses many hats,
most of which are stylish. When she's not busy writing, reviewing, editing,
fundraising, or finding marginalia of particular note for LiP's
margins, she works for Changemakers, a San Francisco-based public foundation
that supports community-based social change philanthropy. Ask her where
you should be directing your support today. No, really, ask her... Senior editor
Erin
Wiegand has quite a lot of responsibility. To make up for it,
she pursues dangerous and uninhibited activities such as baking, napping,
and plotting the destruction of western civilization. Kari
Lydersen is a contributing editor to LiP.
She is also an apparently indefatigable journalist
just trying to earn enough loot for a one-way ticket to Hawaii's North
Shore so she can grow mangos and surf all day for the rest of her life.
She currently writes for a dizzying array of publications, including Alternet,
Chicago Ink, the Chicago Reader, the Washington Post, Punk Planet, Clamor,
In These Times, The Heartland Journal, Swimming World, and American
Forests. Editorial advisor to LiP Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz, recently retired after 30 years as a professor of Ethnic Studies at California State University Hayward. With a doctorate in history from UCLA, she initiated the Department of Ethnic Studies, specializing in Native American Studies, a field in which she has published eight books and numerous articles. She has been active since 1977 in the field of international human rights, lobbying at the United Nations for initiatives for the self-determination of Indigenous Peoples. A longtime activist, Ortiz was one of the founders of the women's liberation movement in the 1960s, about which she wrote in a memoir, Outlaw Woman: Memoir of the War Years, 1960-1975. An earlier historical memoir, Red Dirt: Growing Up Okie, recounts her roots as a child of rural poverty, but also heir to her grandfather's rural radicalism as an organizer for the Industrial Workers of the World in Oklahoma. She has completed another memoir of Reagan's contra war against the Sandinistas in Nicaragua, to be published by South End Books in 2005. Check out her website at www.reddirtsite.com Film editor
Jacob
Anderson-Minshall is a transgender (FTM) freelance writer
and artist |
| Contributors |
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Winona LaDuke resides on the White Earth reservation in Minnesota with her two children. She founded the Indigenous Womens' Network, led the successful opposition to the James Bay hydroelectric project, and was a vice-presidential candidate on the Green Party ticket in 2000. Robin D. G. Kelley teaches history at New York University and is the author of Yo Mama's Dysfunktional! and Race Rebels: Culture, Politics, and the Black Working class. Martín Espada is the author and editor of numerous collections of poetry, including his own City of Coughing and Dead Radiators (1993) and Imagine the Angels of Bread (1996), which won the American Book Award. He teaches English at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. He's also been a bar bouncer, a monkey caretaker in a primate lab, a latrine digger in Sandanista Nicaragua, and a tenants rights lawyer. Cynthia Peters is a freelance editor and writer, and an activist with the Jamaica Plain Action Network (JPAN), a new community-based group organizing in response to the current crisis. Mark Crispin Miller is a media critic and activist for democratic media reform, professor of media ecology at New York University, and author of Boxed In: The Culture of TV, Seeing Through Movies, and The Bush Dyslexicon: Observations on a National Disorder. Michael Eric Dyson is an author and Avalon Foundation Professor in the Humanities at the University of Pennsylvania. His books include, among others I May Not Get There With You: The True Martin Luther King, Jr., Race Rules: Navigating the Color Line, and Making Malcolm: The Myth and Meaning of Malcolm X. Matt Kelley is the founder of The MAVIN Foundation, a non-profit organization dedicated to redefining diversity by celebrating mixed-race young people. In 1998, he founded MAVIN magazine, the only magazine about multiracial Americans. He lives in Seattle. Carrie McLaren, who works at the Berkeley Carroll School in Brooklyn, publishes and edits Stay Free!, a print magazine focused on issues surrounding commercialism and American culture. When not writing cranky letters to the Philadelphia-Inquirer, yelling at the television and doing other predictable things, Arthur Stamoulis spends his fun time working for a Philadelphia community group called Media Tank. A former editor for Common Courage Press, he is always on the lookout for interesting projects. Feel free to let him know. Jordan Elgrably is the former editor of CriminalDefense Weekly, published by CriminalDefense.com. He has been an international journalist published in four languages, and is the founder of three nonprofit organizations promoting improved community relations and cross-cultural education, among them Levantine Cultural Center. Matthew Klam, an O. Henry Award winner, was named one of the twenty best young fiction writers in America by The New Yorker in 1999. (Now, LiP reader, try and recall just one of the other nineteen writers named by The New Yorker.) Welcomed into the Surrealist Movement in Paris by André Breton in 1966, poet Franklin Rosemont co-founded the Chicago Surrealist Group later that year. His books include What is Surrealism? Selected Writings of André Breton (Pathfinder Press) and The Forecast is Hot! Tracts and Other Collective Declarations of the Surrealist Movement in the United States (Black Swan Press). Justin Podur writes for ZNet and has prepared ZNet's Institutional Racism Instructional. He lives in Toronto. Lisette Garcia is a former journalist whose work has appeared in The Miami Herald, The Kansas City Star and, most recently, The Associated Press. These days she is proudest reporting that her 7-year-old son, Justice, and her 7-month-old rooster, Precious, are equally fond of corn. When not writing or riding one of his five bikes, Ryan Singel teaches ESL, tends his garden, studies Spanish, and pays too much in student loans. Once upon a time, he was an Information Retrieval Engineer for a company whose management had never seen the movie Brazil. He would never refer to decaffeinated coffee as unleaded, nor would he drink it. Ché Green is not an Argentine revolutionary fighting in Cuba, as was his namesake. A former investment banker and corporate wage-slave, Ché is now the founder and director of The ARMEDIA Institute, a nonprofit research and advocacy organization focusing on farm animal issues in the United States. Dan Curry has written for The Chronicle of Higher Education and The Wall Street Journal. Currently unemployed, Dan has to resort to using the public library's computer, where a random stranger recently assailed him for being responsible for the programmatic torture and imprisonment of Jesse Jackson. Jillian Sandell is an assistant professor of women’s studies at San Francisco State University. Her work has appeared in Bad Subjects, Film Quarterly and Socialist Review, among other places. Steven Wishnia is a former senior editor at High Times and author of Exit 25 Utopia (The Imaginary Press) Jessica Clark is a former LiP Co-Editor and recovering cultural critic. She writes about media issues, gender politics, and the pitfalls of representation, and is presently the Managing Editor of In These Times. D.M. Yankowski is a freelance writer and editor living in Washington, D.C. He is a frequent contributor to Clamor and Friction magazine. Among Michael Parenti's recent books are History as Mystery, To Kill a Nation: The Attack on Yugoslavia, and the 7th edition of Democracy for the Few. Eqbal Ahmad was Professor Emeritus of International Relations and Middle Eastern Studies at Hampshire College in Amherst, Massachusetts. For many years he was managing editor of the quarterly Race and Class. His articles and essays appeared in The Nation and other journals throughout the world. He wrote a weekly column for Dawn, Pakistan's oldest English newspaper. Confronting Empire, the book of Eqbal Ahmad interviews by David Barsamian, is published by South End Press. Wendy-O Matik is a Bay Area-based freelance writer, published poet and radical performance artist. As assistant professor of Advertising and Sociology at the University of Illinois, Champaign, Dan Cook challenges students to unlearn the lessons they are taught daily by media and advertising. Rachel Rinaldo is a freelance writer and graduate student in sociology. She is also a program coordinator for Indymedia Newsreal a monthly, half-hour compilation of 5-minute news segments contributed by independent producers around North America. It airs on Free Speech TV starting in August in select cities. Larry Shaw is the writer and performer of "Sold Down the River," the anti-WTO protest song played from the Steelworkers' billboard truck during the protests in Seattle. Katje Richstatter’s work has appeared in Punk Planet and the San Francisco Bay Guardian, among other places. Joel Schalit is the author of Jerusalem Calling and editor of The Anti-Capitalism Reader: Imagining a Geography of Resistance, both of which are published by Brooklyn’s Akashic Books. Schalit’s work has appeared in the San Francisco Bay Guardian, Sound Collector and Tikkun. Mona West is the pseudonym for a well-known and award-winning writer based in the San Francisco Bay Area. E-mail her at ms_monawest@hotmail.com. While he believes in place-based politics, Benjamin Ortiz lives permanently in exile from himself. His writing has appeared in the Chicago Reader, New City, San Antonio Current, The Neighborhood Works, Border Beat, and Compost: An International Journal of Literature & Ideas. Jack Peasley is a poet, performance artist, wit raconteur, sexual mystic, deceitful motivational corporate speaker, and entirely unknown author who usually lives in Chicago. Office assistant Albert Awehali
enjoys long walks, wet food and a good bone.
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