Monday, July 30, 2018

Summer School - 3/5 August - Birmingham

Summer School - 3/5 August - Birmingham
It's just two weeks to go until the SPGB's 'Gender And Power' Summer School in Birmingham. We are happy to be able to confirm all the sessions and times, listed below.

The event will also include two exclusive publications, an exhibition and a bookstall.
Please let us know if you would like any further details (or if you have any special requirements: ground floor room, special diet etc).

Contact: spgbschool@yahoo.co.uk
Details of how to get to the venue can be found here:
https://www.fircroft.ac.uk/Pages/FAQs/Category/how-to-find-us

Friday 3rd August

Arrival from 17.00
18.30 – 19.00 Dinner
19.45
'Inside The Matrix'
This talk will argue against the premise that oppression is simply the product of class struggle and that feminism can be dismissed as identity politics which distract from the real issue. Feminism and socialism are not either / or, positions. An understanding of class, patriarchy and intersectionality is crucial to the challenge of establishing a world based on socialist principles.
Lorna Stevens and Paddy Shannon
21.30 Social

Saturday 4th August

7.30 – 8.45 Breakfast
10.00
'Equal Work For Equal Value?'
This talk will look at the relevance of value, and the labour theory of value to discussions around the gender pay gap in the workplace. It will look at value as a story told to lay claim to the output of society, and will relate that to Utopian visions of women and womanhood. It will argue that that value is not a value-free idea, but in fact a deliberate move in the class struggle to enforce the power of the capitalist class. Along the way, this talk will take in how the working class is exploited, and how this exploitation contains within itself the end of capitalist values. Finally, it will suggest that the struggle over equal wages contains within itself the drive toward the abolition of the wages system itself.
Bill Martin
12.30 – 13.15 Lunch
13.45
'Dangerous Women: How History And The Establishment Hide Female Militancy'
From the militant 18th Century female trade unionists who dunked strike-breakers under water pumps, to the matchwomen, suffragettes and the true founder the Me Too movement, many of history’s most inspiring women have been designated the ‘wrong kind of heroines’ and their stories suppressed or minimised.
Guest speaker Dr Louise Raw has spent 20 years uncovering them, and will introduce or enlarge upon the histories of women of colour, of the working-class and with disabilities, who have much to teach us even today.
18.30 – 19.00 Dinner
19.15
Film showing: 'Did Gender Egalitarianism Make Us Human?' by Camilla Power (Senior lecturer in Anthropology at the University of East London)
Introduced by Carla Dee and Richard Field, with discussion afterwards
22.00 Social

Sunday 5th August

7.30 – 8.45 Breakfast
10.00
'Sex And Power'
The sex industry makes up a significant, if partly-hidden, sector of the economy. Prostitution and pornography represent extremes of exploitation, lucrative to those with the power and damaging to those pushed into selling themselves. This talk will examine the differing impacts which the sex industry has on both women and men, and what this tells us about capitalism as a whole.
Mike Foster
12.30 – 13.15 Lunch
Depart


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