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Madison Activist Calendar from 3/11/2024


 

Madison Activist Calendar from 3/11/2024


To post events or announcements for future listings, please contact: peckjohne@...


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For an online version of this calendar, please visit the Madison Infoshop Facebook page:


This calendar is brought to you by the friendly volunteer collective of the Madison Infoshop, c/o Social Justice Center, 1202 Williamson St., Madison, WI 53703. As a volunteer run collective serving the greater WI community, we also offer a safe organizing space with a wide range of activist resources including books, zines, periodicals, art supplies, topical files, graphics, megaphones, and button makers. We also host a variety of ongoing reading groups, film discussions, and radically inspired cultural events. The Madison Infoshop is whatever its members wish it to be!



Thurs. March 14th 3:00 pm UW-Madison School of Human Ecology, 5th Fl. (1300 Linden Dr.) Flax to Linen in Wisconsin: From Folklore to the Future ¨C talk with Leslie Schroeder of Wisconsin Linen Revival. Come learn about the effort to provide access to locally and sustainably grown flax and processed linen to benefit local farmers and economies, build community, and shorten the journey from seed to shirt. Info?


Mon. March 18th 12:00 Noon Siege Creep: Waste, Airbnb, and Speculation Between Israel/Palestine and Athens ¨C virtual talk with Sophia Stamatopoulou-Robbins, Bard College. In the occupied West Bank waste and its infrastructures become braided into people¡¯s senses of ethics, self, and possibilities for alternative futures. Crossing the Mediterranean, Israeli and Palestinian investors are turning Athens apartments into stories of Greek homes that have been turned into Airbnb listings as a mode of maintaining partial attachments under prolonged austerity, a process she calls ¡°controlled alienation.¡± Together these two projects offer answers to two main questions: How do destructive conditions¡ªbe they ecological, political, or economic¡ªremake socialities and relations? And how do people harness the material and semiotic properties of infrastructures to make their everyday lives workable¡ªthat is, livable¡ªunder conditions of duress? For login details, visit:


Mon. March 18th 6:00 pm Defending Wisconsin's Sacred Waters from Dangerous Mine Proposals

- virtual presentation with Dr. Al Gedicks has been instrumental in uniting Wisconsin¡¯s tribes with grassroots rural mine opponents to form winning coalitions. He will discuss new plans for exploratory drilling for copper and gold deposits northwest of Medford mark the beginning of yet another round in the fight to protect Wisconsin¡¯s waters. Meanwhile, Back 40 Mine opponents remain vigilant. Hosted by the Sierra Club. For more info and to register, visit: =


Mon. March 18th 6:00 pm Worker Justice Wisconsin Annual Meeting ¨C virtual event! Join us to celebrate the accomplishments of WJW and to learn more about its partnerships with community, faith, and labor allies. For more into and login details, visit:


Thurs. March 21st 7:00 pm Barrymore Theater (2090 Atwood Ave,) Wild & Scenic Film Festival ¨C Where Activism Gets Inspired! Hosted by the River Alliance of Wisconsin. Tickets are $24.50 in advance. For more info, visit:

Tues. April 2nd ¨C April 20th WI Historical Society (816 State St.) Waging Peace in Vietnam Exhibit! During America¡¯s War in Vietnam, tens of thousands of GIs and veterans created a robust movement in opposition to the war. Yet its history is largely unknown. This exhibit (along with its companion book) show how the GI movement unfolded, from the numerous anti-war coffeehouses springing up outside military bases, to the hundreds of GI newspapers giving an independent voice to active soldiers, to the stockade revolts and the strikes and near-mutinies on naval vessels and in the air force. It¡¯s time to set the record straight. More info? Visit:


Tues. April 2nd 5:00 pm WI Historical Society (816 State St.) Opening reception for the Waging Peace in Vietnam Exhibit with a talk: Dissent and Resistance Within the Armed Forces - featuring Susan Schnall, national president, Veterans for Peace; Ronald L. Haeberle, former Army photographer of the iconic My Lai Massacre photographs; David Cortright, Professor Emeritus and special advisor for policy, Kroc Institute, University of Notre Dame, author and editor of over 20 books including Waging Peace in Vietnam: U.S. Soldiers and Veterans who Opposed the War. For more info, visit:


Thurs. April 4th 6:30 pm Hell of a Book, A Novel by Jason Mott ¨C virtual WILPF Book Circle conversation. An African-American author sets out on a cross-country book tour to promote his bestselling novel. That storyline drives Jason Mott's novel and is the scaffolding of something much larger and more urgent: since his novel also tells the story of Soot, a young Black boy living in a rural town in the recent past, and The Kid, a possibly imaginary child who appears to the author on his tour. For login details, email: wilfpmadison@...


Fri. April 5th 12:00 Noon WI Historical Society (816 State St.) A War Without End: Legacies of the American War in Vietnam and Among American Veterans with Ngo Xuan Hien, communications manager, Project RENEW; Chuck Searcy, co-founder and international advisor to Project RENEW; Heather Bowser, founder of Children of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance, advocacy for offspring of Vietnam Veterans exposed to Agent Orange. Part of the Waging Peace in Vietnam Exhibit. For more info, visit:


Tues. April 9th 7:00 pm WI Historical Society (816 State St.) Screening and discussion of the movie: The War At Home with with director Glenn Silber. Part of the Waging Peace in Vietnam Exhibit. For more info, visit:


Wed. April 10th 7:00 pm WI Historical Society (816 State St.) Screening and discussion of the movie: Sir! No Sir! with director David Zeiger. Part of the Waging Peace in Vietnam Exhibit. For more info, visit:


Sat. April 13th 1:00 pm Farley Center (2299 Spring Rose Rd. near Verona) The Dine' and Uranium!

Presenters, Omie Baldwin and Cathy Middlecamp, will tell not one but two stories, as the title suggests. But these quickly converge, because uranium ore was found on the land of the Dine¡¯ in the Four Corners Area of the United States. Omie Baldwin will speak about the Navajo People¡¯s cultural history, where and how they lived, past and present, how they needed work, and the mining facilities nearby in which they found work. Cathy Middlecamp will talk about three reasons why we took uranium out of the ground, what happened when we did, and some more general stuff about radioactivity and ¡°radiation.¡± Who are these people and what are the stories of their land? What is uranium and what are the stories of uranium miners in the past? What new chapters in the story are being written today? We promise more questions than answers together with a lively romp through stories of our (slightly) radioactive planet. For more info, visit:


Sun. April 14th 7:00 pm WI Historical Society (816 State St.) Screening and discussion of the movie: The Whistle Blower of My Lai, documentary on the Kronos Quartet¡¯s making of the opera My Lai, plus live performance by Vanessa Vo, Kronos Quartet soloist with traditional Vietnamese instruments. Part of the Waging Peace in Vietnam Exhibit. For more info, visit:


Tues. April 16th 5:30 pm WI Historical Society (816 State St.) A Vietnamese Woman¡¯s Journey From War to Peace ¨C discussion with Le Ly Hayslip, author of the memoir, When Heaven and Earth Changed Place, with interlocutor, Norman Stockwell. Part of the Waging Peace in Vietnam Exhibit. For more info, visit:


Fri. April 19th ¨C 26th UW-Madison Earth Fest 2024! ¨C hosted by the Gaylord Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies! Includes a kickoff celebration on Fri. April 19th from 1:00 ¨C 6:00 pm at the Discovery Institute (330 N. Orchard St.) For a full schedule and registration details, visit:


Sun. April 21st 2:00 pm WI Historical Society (816 State St.) Screening and discussion of the movie: Hunting Wartime, directed by Samantha Farinella. This documentary exposes the mistreatment of patriotic Native American soldiers while they served in Vietnam and upon their return to the United States. Introduced by Samantha Skenandore, tribal advocate. Part of the Waging Peace in Vietnam Exhibit. For more info, visit:


Tues. April 23rd 5:00 pm Madison Museum of Contemporary Art (227 State St.) Bad River: a Story of Defiance ¨C screening and discussion of the newly released documentary by award-winning filmmaker, Mary Mazzio. Reception before the film at 6:00 pm followed at 7:45 pm by a panel with Mike Wiggins, Patty Loew, Runninghorse Livingston, and David O¡¯Connor. To register, visit: For more on the film itself, visit:


Sat. April 27th 11:00 am ¨C 4:00 pm Madison Central Library (201 W. Mifflin) 2024 Madison Print and Resist Zinefest! Join dozens of regional artists, writers, print-makers and advocates for a day-long festival of transformative, and transgressive DIY publishing and printmaking. Various makers will be present and ready to share their work with the Madison area community. Drop in throughout the day to see their work and learn more about this long-standing art form. The event is free to attend and open to the public, keeping in mind that artists will not be censored and some content may not be suitable for children. Madison Print & Resist will comply with all public health recommendations active on the date of the event, even if not mandated at the time, there will be strong encouragement for social distancing and mask wearing. More info, visit the Facebook page: