{"title":"Art as Action","description":"Making as resistance. Books about creative process, artistic rebellion, and why creating something — music, writing, visual art — is itself an act of defiance and repair.","products":[{"product_id":"just-kids","title":"Just Kids","description":"\u003cp\u003e\u003cmeta charset=\"utf-8\"\u003eSmith’s elegy to youth, love, and creation is a devotional for the artist’s soul. Through her bond with Robert Mapplethorpe, she captures what it means to make art before you know how — to starve for it, live for it, and let it change you. It’s poetry, it’s punk, it’s pedagogy in raw form: learning by burning.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45154491596998,"sku":null,"price":18.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/just-kids.webp?v=1761505283"},{"product_id":"the-people-s-platform","title":"The People’s Platform","description":"\u003cp\u003e\u003cmeta charset=\"utf-8\"\u003eTaylor rips the utopian veneer off the internet age to expose who’s really cashing in on “sharing.” She argues that without structural change, the digital commons will keep replicating the old hierarchies — just with better branding. A sharp, humane call to reclaim culture from algorithms and turn the web back into a tool for people, not platforms.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45154491629766,"sku":null,"price":21.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/the-peoples-platform.webp?v=1761505285"},{"product_id":"the-e-myth-revisited","title":"The E-Myth Revisited","description":"\u003cp\u003e\u003cmeta charset=\"utf-8\"\u003eGerber blows up the fantasy of the lone visionary grinding their way to freedom. Most small businesses fail, he argues, not for lack of passion but for lack of structure. \u003cem data-start=\"821\" data-end=\"833\"\u003eThe E-Myth\u003c\/em\u003e is the field manual for turning a hustle into an enterprise — and yourself from overworked employee into liberated architect. Punk because it’s practical. Pedagogical because it teaches you to build.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45154491662534,"sku":null,"price":26.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/e-myth-revisited.jpg?v=1761505285"},{"product_id":"steal-like-an-artist","title":"Steal Like an Artist","description":"\u003cp\u003e\u003cmeta charset=\"utf-8\"\u003eKleon gives you the creative pep talk you didn’t know you needed: nothing is original, and that’s the good news. Art, he reminds us, is remix, conversation, and theft with integrity. This is a pocket-sized permission slip to make boldly, borrow wisely, and turn influence into your own creative revolution.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45154491695302,"sku":null,"price":14.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/steal-like-an-artist.webp?v=1761505287"},{"product_id":"sister-outsider","title":"Sister Outsider","description":"\u003cp\u003e\u003cmeta charset=\"utf-8\"\u003eLorde’s voice is both wound and weapon — unapologetic, lyrical, and electric with truth. In these essays and speeches, she reclaims identity as a source of power and difference as a catalyst for change. A text that doesn’t just challenge oppression — it challenges you to live your life as a deliberate act of defiance.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45154493071558,"sku":null,"price":17.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/sister-outsider.webp?v=1761505324"},{"product_id":"m-train","title":"M Train","description":"\u003cp\u003e\u003cmeta charset=\"utf-8\"\u003e\u003cem data-start=\"76\" data-end=\"85\"\u003eM Train\u003c\/em\u003e drifts like a daydream through cafés, notebooks, and ghosts — a pilgrimage of a mind that refuses to stop creating. Patti Smith writes about loss, ritual, and the quiet work of keeping the flame alive when no one’s watching. It’s less a memoir than a meditation — a love letter to imagination, resilience, and the strange holiness of the everyday.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45203974684870,"sku":null,"price":19.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/m-train.webp?v=1762911280"},{"product_id":"chronicles-volume-one","title":"Bob Dylan Chronicles: Volume One","description":"\u003cp\u003e\u003cmeta charset=\"utf-8\"\u003eDylan’s \u003cem data-start=\"89\" data-end=\"101\"\u003eChronicles\u003c\/em\u003e reads like a back-alley hymn — elliptical, intimate, and unbothered by linear time. He drifts through the smoky corners of New York, fame, and folk mythology, showing how art, accident, and obsession collide to make a voice that can’t be tamed. It’s less about telling his story than about tracing the strange machinery of creativity itself — the moment when words catch fire.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45203978223814,"sku":null,"price":18.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/bob-dylan-chronicles.jpg?v=1762911651"},{"product_id":"the-war-of-art","title":"The War of Art","description":"\u003cp\u003e\u003cmeta charset=\"utf-8\"\u003ePressfield declares war on the invisible enemy every artist knows too well: Resistance — that sly, shape-shifting force that keeps us from doing the work. \u003cem data-start=\"239\" data-end=\"255\"\u003eThe War of Art\u003c\/em\u003e reads like a battlefield manual for makers, dreamers, and procrastinators alike. It’s blunt, funny, and sometimes mystical — a kick in the ass disguised as philosophy.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45203981959366,"sku":null,"price":17.95,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/the-war-of-art.webp?v=1762911899"},{"product_id":"art-and-fear","title":"Art and Fear","description":"\u003cp\u003e\u003cmeta charset=\"utf-8\"\u003e\u003cem data-start=\"87\" data-end=\"99\"\u003eArt \u0026amp; Fear\u003c\/em\u003e is a quiet classic — the antidote to the myth of genius. Bayles and Orland write for the working artist, the one who doubts, hesitates, and keeps going anyway. They expose the fears that stalk every creative act — failure, exposure, insignificance — and offer the only real cure: make the work anyway. Honest, unromantic, and deeply compassionate, it’s a survival guide for anyone who’s ever stared down a blank page.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45203982876870,"sku":null,"price":12.95,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/art-and-fear.jpg?v=1762912115"},{"product_id":"ways-of-seeing","title":"Ways of Seeing","description":"\u003cp\u003e\u003cmeta charset=\"utf-8\"\u003eBerger’s \u003cem data-start=\"80\" data-end=\"96\"\u003eWays of Seeing\u003c\/em\u003e rips the velvet curtain off the art world and shows us the machinery underneath — how images teach us what (and who) to value. In plain, poetic language, he dissects advertising, the male gaze, and the commodification of beauty, revealing how “seeing” is never neutral. It’s a visual manifesto that turns the gallery into a classroom and every billboard into a political text.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45203984285894,"sku":null,"price":21.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/ways-of-seeing.webp?v=1762912319"},{"product_id":"camera-lucida","title":"Camera Lucida","description":"\u003cp\u003e\u003cmeta charset=\"utf-8\"\u003eBarthes’ \u003cem data-start=\"86\" data-end=\"101\"\u003eCamera Lucida\u003c\/em\u003e is a love letter to the photograph — and to the ache that lives inside every image. Written after his mother’s death, it’s both a philosophical investigation and an emotional autopsy, tracing how photos wound us with what’s gone. Through his notions of \u003cem data-start=\"355\" data-end=\"364\"\u003estudium\u003c\/em\u003e and \u003cem data-start=\"369\" data-end=\"378\"\u003epunctum\u003c\/em\u003e, Barthes exposes why certain images pierce straight through theory into grief. It’s haunting, tender, and quietly revolutionary.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45204008534214,"sku":null,"price":18.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/camera-lucida.webp?v=1762912499"},{"product_id":"shock-of-the-new","title":"Shock of the New","description":"\u003cp\u003e\u003cmeta charset=\"utf-8\"\u003eHughes’ \u003cem data-start=\"92\" data-end=\"114\"\u003eThe Shock of the New\u003c\/em\u003e is the definitive tour through modern art’s century of rebellion — a sweeping, sharp-tongued account of how painters, sculptors, and radicals shattered tradition to invent the modern eye. With unmatched wit and clarity, Hughes cuts through pretension and hype, revealing the social and political nerves beneath the avant-garde. It’s both love letter and autopsy — art history written like a punk sermon.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45205267579078,"sku":null,"price":10.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/the-shock-of-the-new.webp?v=1762973018"},{"product_id":"the-story-of-art-without-men","title":"The Story of Art Without Men","description":"\u003cp\u003e\u003cmeta charset=\"utf-8\"\u003eHessel’s \u003cem data-start=\"101\" data-end=\"131\"\u003eThe Story of Art Without Men\u003c\/em\u003e rewrites the canon with the names, visions, and genius history tried to erase. From forgotten Renaissance painters to contemporary boundary-breakers, she maps a lineage of women who made art — and made meaning — in spite of invisibility. Bold, accessible, and long overdue, it’s both history and correction: a celebration of art that didn’t wait for permission.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45205276131526,"sku":null,"price":19.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/the-story-of-art-without-men.webp?v=1762973118"},{"product_id":"dada-art-and-anti-art","title":"Dada: Art and Anti-Art","description":"\u003cp\u003e\u003cmeta charset=\"utf-8\"\u003eRichter’s \u003cem data-start=\"98\" data-end=\"122\"\u003eDada: Art and Anti-Art\u003c\/em\u003e is the inside story of the movement that blew up art itself. As one of Dada’s original provocateurs, Richter chronicles how a generation of disillusioned artists responded to war, nationalism, and reason itself with nonsense, collage, and beautiful chaos. It’s both history and firsthand manifesto — a reminder that destruction can be creation’s first gesture, and laughter can be the loudest protest.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45205286584518,"sku":null,"price":23.95,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/dada-art-and-anti-art.webp?v=1762973456"},{"product_id":"art-as-experience","title":"Art as Experience","description":"\u003cp\u003e\u003cmeta charset=\"utf-8\"\u003eDewey’s \u003cem data-start=\"87\" data-end=\"106\"\u003eArt as Experience\u003c\/em\u003e is a quietly radical manifesto disguised as philosophy. He tears art down from its museum pedestal and returns it to life — to making, doing, feeling. For Dewey, art isn’t an object; it’s a \u003cem data-start=\"297\" data-end=\"306\"\u003eprocess\u003c\/em\u003e of perception and participation, where meaning is born through experience. Written with the clarity of a teacher and the soul of a craftsman, it’s a reminder that creativity is not elite — it’s elemental.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45205291958470,"sku":null,"price":19.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/art-as-experience.webp?v=1762973634"},{"product_id":"art-work-everything-you-need-to-know-and-do-as-you-pursue-your-art-career","title":"Art\/Work: Everything You Need to Know (and Do) As You Pursue Your Art Career","description":"\u003cp\u003e\u003cmeta charset=\"utf-8\"\u003eBhandari’s \u003cem data-start=\"176\" data-end=\"186\"\u003eArt\/Work\u003c\/em\u003e is the no-nonsense field guide every artist wishes they had in art school — a candid, practical manual on how to make a living without losing your soul. It covers contracts, galleries, grants, taxes, and boundaries with the clear-eyed realism of someone who’s seen how the art world actually works. It’s not theory or critique — it’s survival as praxis, professionalism as rebellion against the myth of the starving artist.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45205328134342,"sku":null,"price":22.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/art-work.webp?v=1762974049"},{"product_id":"please-kill-me-the-uncensored-oral-history-of-punk","title":"Please Kill Me: The Uncensored Oral History of Punk","description":"\u003cp\u003e\u003cmeta charset=\"utf-8\"\u003e\u003cem data-start=\"123\" data-end=\"139\"\u003ePlease Kill Me\u003c\/em\u003e is the snarling, sweat-soaked origin story of punk told by the people who bled for it. Through raw, unfiltered interviews with Iggy Pop, Patti Smith, Dee Dee Ramone, and countless others, McNeil and McCain piece together a chaotic oral history of art as self-destruction and salvation. It’s funny, filthy, tragic, and true — a testament to the beautiful wreckage that happens when rage finds rhythm.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45205343207622,"sku":null,"price":20.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/please-kill-me.webp?v=1762974243"},{"product_id":"the-freedom-writers-diary","title":"The Freedom Writers Diary","description":"\u003cdiv class=\"field\"\u003e\n\u003cdiv class=\"field-value\"\u003eIn 1994 Erin Gruwell was a first-year English teacher at Woodrow Wilson High School in Long Beach — the same year as the Rodney King riots, the same year her students were living through gang violence, poverty, and a school system that had written them off. She gave them journals and told them to write. What came out was 150 diaries — from students who had witnessed murders, survived abuse, navigated foster care, crossed borders — and a classroom that became something else entirely. Not an inspirational teacher story. A collective act of testimony by teenagers who were told their lives didn't matter and decided to document them anyway. The most important book on this shelf for the P\u0026amp;P audience because it happened in Long Beach and because it proves that writing is a radical act regardless of who is doing it.\u003c\/div\u003e\n\u003c\/div\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45815291871430,"sku":null,"price":19.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/the-freedom-writers-diary.webp?v=1777917108"},{"product_id":"lipstick-traces-a-secret-history-of-the-twentieth-century","title":"Lipstick Traces: A Secret History of the Twentieth Century","description":"\u003cdiv class=\"field\"\u003e\n\u003cdiv class=\"field-value\"\u003eMarcus asks a question nobody had thought to ask: what if the Sex Pistols were not new? What if Johnny Rotten's sneer connected backward through the Situationists to the Dadaists to the medieval Free Spirits — a recurring underground current of absolute refusal that keeps erupting through Western history whenever the official world becomes intolerable? The book that results is associative, digressive, and formally as radical as its subject — tracing lipstick traces across centuries of negation to argue that punk was not a moment but a gesture, and that this gesture is permanent. The most important cultural history of punk ever written and the one that places it in the largest possible frame. Read after Please Kill Me and England's Dreaming and the argument becomes complete: punk happened before, it will happen again, and P\u0026amp;P is part of the same line.\u003c\/div\u003e\n\u003c\/div\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45823518933190,"sku":null,"price":33.5,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/lipstick-traces.jpg?v=1778097780"},{"product_id":"a-season-in-hell-illuminations","title":"A Season in Hell \/ Illuminations","description":"\u003cdiv class=\"field\"\u003e\n\u003cdiv class=\"field-value\"\u003eRimbaud wrote A Season in Hell at nineteen and abandoned literature entirely at twenty, spending the rest of his life as a trader and gun runner in Africa — the most complete enactment in literary history of refusing to be what the world wanted you to be. What he left behind in those two years is the headwaters of everything on this shelf: the systematic derangement of the senses as a method of visionary perception, the complete rejection of bourgeois literary form, the rage against the limits of language that pushed language past what it thought possible. Debord read him. The Beats read him. Patti Smith read him. The Sex Pistols were his grandchildren. A Season in Hell is the P\u0026amp;P ur-text — the first document in the line that runs through every punk artist who ever decided that making something true mattered more than making something acceptable. The Wyatt Mason translation is the one to use.\u003c\/div\u003e\n\u003c\/div\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45823561564358,"sku":null,"price":18.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/a-season-in-hell-illuminations_5fb77a48-e56a-4def-b49b-65ce0ed77bd6.jpg?v=1778098548"},{"product_id":"against-interpretation","title":"Against Interpretation","description":"\u003cdiv class=\"field\"\u003e\n\u003cdiv class=\"field-value\"\u003eSontag published this in 1966 as a direct attack on the dominant mode of art criticism — the tradition that treats a work of art as a container for hidden meaning to be extracted by an expert who knows better than you what you just experienced. Her argument: interpretation is an act of domestication. It makes art safe by reducing it to content, by rushing past the actual experience of the work to explain what it signifies. What she wanted instead was an erotics of art — a criticism that attended to form, sensation, and surface, that trusted the encounter before reaching for the explanation. This is the most important argument for children making films and stories: your perceptual experience of the work is the primary data, not a puzzle to be decoded by someone with more authority. Sontag was not anti-intellectual — she was the most rigorous intellectual of her generation. She was anti the use of intellect to defuse what art actually does to a body. The third pillar of the DoCR theoretical shelf alongside Brecht and Bazin — Brecht tells you what political performance should do, Bazin tells you what cinema's relationship to reality is, Sontag tells you to trust your own experience before you let anyone explain it away.\u003c\/div\u003e\n\u003c\/div\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45824001900742,"sku":null,"price":29.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/against-interpretation.jpg?v=1778105236"},{"product_id":"the-punk-rock-politics-of-joe-strummer","title":"The Punk Rock Politics of Joe Strummer","description":"\u003cdiv class=\"field\"\u003e\n\u003cdiv class=\"field-value\"\u003eStrummer is easy to love and easy to mythologize — the Clash frontman who made punk political, who showed up for Rock Against Racism, who said we're anti-fascist, anti-violence, anti-racist and pro-creative. Gall, a professor of industrial relations at the University of Glasgow, does something harder: he examines what Strummer's politics actually were, where they came from, how they developed over time, where they were contradictory, and what influence they actually had. Drawing on lyrics, interviews, and bootleg recordings as well as conversations with those Strummer inspired — including Billy Bragg — the book takes the man seriously as a political thinker rather than as an icon. The distinction matters for P\u0026amp;P: Strummer's wariness of organized political parties, his preference for raising consciousness over prescribing answers, his understanding that culture is a battleground — these are not just punk attitudes but a coherent political philosophy that this book is the first to examine rigorously. The most analytical entry on the punk shelf and the necessary complement to Please Kill Me and England's Dreaming — those books make you feel the politics, this one makes you understand them.\u003c\/div\u003e\n\u003c\/div\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45827658350790,"sku":null,"price":24.95,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/the-punk-rock-politics-of-joe-strummer.webp?v=1778181567"},{"product_id":"if-on-a-winters-night-a-traveler","title":"If on a winter's night a traveler","description":"\u003cdiv class=\"field\"\u003e\n\u003cdiv class=\"field-value\"\u003eYou are about to begin reading Italo Calvino's new novel. The novel keeps being interrupted — misbound, replaced, lost, forged — and you keep trying to find the continuation. Calvino addresses the entire novel to you, the reader, in second person, making the act of reading the subject of the book itself. The formal argument is the political one: that reading is not a passive act of consumption but an active act of construction, that the reader makes the text as much as the writer does, that a story requires your participation to exist. The most accessible introduction to metafiction ever written and the most fun — it is also genuinely suspenseful despite being a novel about reading a novel. Directly relevant to DoCR: the same argument Brecht makes about theatre and Bazin makes about cinema, applied to the novel form. Dual-tagged because the formal argument is as important as the comedy.\u003c\/div\u003e\n\u003c\/div\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45836489392326,"sku":null,"price":18.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/if-on-a-winter-s-night-a-traveler.webp?v=1778626844"},{"product_id":"our-band-could-be-your-life","title":"Our Band Could Be Your Life","description":"\u003cdiv class=\"field\"\u003e\n\u003cdiv class=\"field-value\"\u003eThirteen bands from the American underground music scene of the 1980s — Black Flag, the Minutemen, Fugazi, Sonic Youth, Hüsker Dü, The Replacements, and eight others — each operating completely outside the mainstream music industry, building their own labels, their own distribution networks, their own touring circuits, their own audiences from scratch. Azerrad conducted primary source interviews with everyone involved and produced the most complete document of DIY culture as a political practice ever written. The argument running through all thirteen chapters is the same: that independence from existing systems of production and distribution is not a compromise forced by commercial failure but a deliberate political choice, and that the music made inside that choice sounds different because it is different — accountable only to the people making it and the people listening. Ian MacKaye of Fugazi is the most complete real-world expression of the DoCR philosophy that exists anywhere: no corporate money, no compromise, no apology, no explanation required. The essential companion to Please Kill Me and England's Dreaming — those books document punk's origins, this one documents what the survivors built from the wreckage.\u003c\/div\u003e\n\u003c\/div\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45840059072710,"sku":null,"price":22.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/our-band-could-be-your-life.webp?v=1778710350"},{"product_id":"englands-dreaming","title":"England's Dreaming","description":"\u003cdiv class=\"field\"\u003e\n\u003cdiv class=\"field-value\"\u003eBritain in the mid-1970s: unemployment, postcolonial decline, a welfare state being dismantled, working-class youth with no future and no language for the fury that produced. Then the Sex Pistols. Savage traces punk not as a music scene but as a cultural eruption produced by specific structural conditions — the kind of anger that happens when a generation is told the social contract that was supposed to include them has been cancelled. He was present for much of it and writes with the authority of someone who understood what he was watching while it was happening. The essential companion to Please Kill Me — that book gives you the American chaos, this one gives you the British argument. Together they are the complete document of why punk happened, what it was actually saying, and why the P\u0026amp;P project is its legitimate heir. See Through It and Make Something Better simultaneously — Savage names the structural conditions that produced punk and documents what those conditions built.\u003c\/div\u003e\n\u003c\/div\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45840090169542,"sku":null,"price":42.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/englands-dreaming.webp?v=1778710630"},{"product_id":"role-models","title":"Role Models","description":"\u003cdiv class=\"field\"\u003e\n\u003cdiv class=\"field-value\"\u003eWaters — the Pope of Trash, director of Pink Flamingos, the man who made Baltimore safe for filth and turned transgression into an art form — writes essays about the people he admires: Johnny Mathis, a Manson girl he believes has genuinely rehabilitated, underground novelist Jane Bowles, a strip club owner in Baltimore, a lawyer who defends death row inmates, Little Richard. The selection is the entire argument. Waters's role models are people who refused every available category — too strange, too committed, too completely themselves to fit anywhere the world had prepared for them — and who built their lives around that refusal with total conviction. The most P\u0026amp;P book about taste as politics ever written: the argument that what you love, and how completely you love it, and whether you love it without apology, is a form of resistance. Waters has spent sixty years proving that being enthusiastically, defiantly wrong by the standards of respectable culture is one of the most serious things a person can do. Every DoCR workshop is downstream of this argument.\u003c\/div\u003e\n\u003c\/div\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45845110980806,"sku":null,"price":19.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/role-models.webp?v=1778796483"},{"product_id":"kaos-theory-the-afrokosmic-ark-of-ben-caldwell","title":"KAOS Theory: The Afrokosmic Ark of Ben Caldwell","description":"\u003cdiv class=\"field\"\u003e\n\u003cdiv class=\"field-value\"\u003eBen Caldwell was part of the L.A. Rebellion — the movement of young Black filmmakers in 1970s Los Angeles that included Charles Burnett and Julie Dash — and when that movement dispersed, he stayed in Leimert Park and opened KAOS Network to everyone: rappers who became Project Blowed, videographers, Afrofuturist thinkers, drag-ball performers, Yoruba congregations, theatre companies, dancers, and children who had nowhere else to go to become themselves. In 1996 police stormed the KAOS complex during a late-night session, assaulted and arrested attendees including Caldwell, and he responded by using his daughter's footage as a counternarrative, turning the attack into a media literacy lesson in real time. That is the Department of Childish Revolution (DoCR) philosophy in action. Frazier, a USC professor, met with Caldwell every Tuesday and Thursday for five months to build this book. It's part rigorous monograph, part art object, full of archival images, photographs, flyers, and documents. The New Yorker called it one of the most beautiful objects they held all year. It is also the most important book on the P\u0026amp;P shelf for understanding what DoCR is trying to build:not a program but an ark, a vessel that protects against extinction, where children can go to be themselves and become themselves. The question Caldwell asked in 1996 is the question P\u0026amp;P is still asking: where can our children go to be themselves, to become themselves, if not here?\u003c\/div\u003e\n\u003c\/div\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45845132050630,"sku":null,"price":40.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/kaos-theory.jpg?v=1778796875"},{"product_id":"ernie-in-kovacsland","title":"Ernie in Kovacsland","description":"\u003cdiv class=\"field\"\u003e\n\u003cdiv class=\"field-value\"\u003eKovacs worked in American television from 1950 until his death in a car accident in 1962 at 43, and in those twelve years he treated the medium as a formal playground that nobody else had thought to enter. He used the camera as a collaborator — tilting it to make furniture slide, using split screens before anyone had named the technique, building visual gags that only worked on television and nowhere else. He baffled network executives and transfixed audiences and directly influenced every formally adventurous comedy that came after him — SNL, Monty Python, MST3K, The Daily Show. This Fantagraphics retrospective, curated by his wife Edie Adams's son and the Kovacs archivist, collects never-before-seen photographs, hand-notated scripts, magazine columns, drawings, and excerpts from his comic novel — the primary source document for understanding what it looks like when someone decides a new medium has unexplored formal possibilities and proceeds to explore all of them at once. Note: some of Kovacs's sketch characters reflected the racist and homophobic conventions of 1950s television comedy; the book presents this material in historical context. The formal innovation is the reason he's on this shelf — the understanding that the medium itself is the argument.\u003c\/div\u003e\n\u003c\/div\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45845148696774,"sku":null,"price":34.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/ernie-in-kovacsland.jpg?v=1778797360"},{"product_id":"the-creative-act","title":"The Creative Act","description":"\u003cp\u003e\u003cmeta charset=\"utf-8\"\u003eRubin has produced records for the Beastie Boys, Johnny Cash, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Adele, Jay-Z, and dozens of others across four decades — and has spent those decades thinking about what the creative process actually is underneath all the mythology. His answer: the artist's job is not to invent but to be receptive, to cultivate the conditions for something that already exists to come through. The book is deliberately aphoristic — short chapters, each a single idea held lightly — because Rubin understands that creativity cannot be systematized, only approached. The argument running through all of it is the one DoCR is built on: that making things is not a skill reserved for the talented but a fundamental human capacity, that everyone is creative in the sense that everyone can pay attention and respond to what they notice, and that the work of an artist is less about technique than about learning to trust what you perceive. The most widely read contemporary book about the creative process and the most accessible entry point to the Make Something Better shelf for readers who haven't yet encountered Brecht, Bazin, or Winnicott.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45857522909382,"sku":null,"price":32.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/the-creative-act.jpg?v=1779218530"},{"product_id":"theatre-of-the-oppressed","title":"Theatre of the Oppressed","description":"\u003cdiv class=\"field\"\u003e\n\u003cdiv class=\"field-value\"\u003eBoal developed his theatre techniques in Brazil in the 1960s and 70s working with peasants and workers and was arrested and tortured by the Brazilian military dictatorship in 1971 before being exiled. The book that came out of that experience is a complete dismantling of traditional theatre and a blueprint for something different. Traditional theatre, Boal argues, is a tool of oppression: it separates actors from spectators, keeping the audience passive while the stage presents a finished reality they can only watch. His alternative — Forum Theatre, Image Theatre, Invisible Theatre — turns spectators into spect-actors who can stop the action, take the stage, and try different solutions to the problems being dramatized. The stage becomes a rehearsal space for the world: you practice the actions you haven't yet dared to take in life. Boal was later elected to the Rio de Janeiro city council where he used legislative theatre to develop laws with citizens,  proving that his theory was not a metaphor. The most essential book on the P\u0026amp;P shelf for Department of Childish Revolution: if Caldwell shows what a community media arts center looks like in practice, Boal shows the philosophical foundation for why that practice changes people. Theatre is not entertainment. It is a rehearsal for revolution.\u003c\/div\u003e\n\u003c\/div\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45857968685254,"sku":null,"price":17.95,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/theatre-of-the-oppressed.jpg?v=1779232228"},{"product_id":"the-hundred-languages-of-children","title":"The Hundred Languages of Children","description":"\u003cdiv class=\"field\"\u003e\n\u003cdiv class=\"field-value\"\u003eAfter WWII the women of Reggio Emilia, a small city in northern Italy, sold a tank, a few trucks, and some horses left behind by the retreating German army and used the money to build a school. They wanted something completely different from the fascist education their children had just lived through — a school built on democratic participation, on the belief that children are competent and curious and rights-bearing from birth, on the idea that young children have not one language but a hundred: painting, clay, wire, movement, music, shadow, light, drama, conversation, silence. The Reggio Emilia approach they built became one of the most influential early childhood education philosophies in the world. This anthology — essays, documentation, photographs, children's work — is the definitive account of what that philosophy looks like in practice. If someone asks what DoCR is trying to build, this book is the answer with photographs. Every child who passes through a Reggio-inspired program learns that their way of knowing the world is valid, that their hundred languages are worth speaking, that the adults around them are genuinely curious about what they think. That is the DoCR promise. Reggio has been keeping it since 1945.\u003c\/div\u003e\n\u003c\/div\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45860099686598,"sku":null,"price":55.2,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/the-hundred-languages-of-children.jpg?v=1779287315"},{"product_id":"in-dialogue-with-reggio-emilia","title":"In Dialogue with Reggio Emilia","description":"\u003cdiv class=\"field\"\u003e\n\u003cdiv class=\"field-value\"\u003eRinaldi started working in Reggio Emilia in 1970, first as a pedagogista under Loris Malaguzzi, then as his successor as pedagogical director of the municipal early childhood centres — the schools built by the women of Reggio Emilia from the proceeds of a sold Nazi tank, which became the most celebrated early childhood education system in the world. This collection of her most important articles, lectures, and interviews — organized thematically and contextualized with full introductions — is the most complete account of the Reggio philosophy in its living form. Where The Hundred Languages of Children documents what the schools look like, Rinaldi explains why they work: why listening is a political act, why documentation is a form of research, why creativity is not a subject to be taught but an orientation toward the world that education either nourishes or extinguishes. She takes on the questions that every DoCR facilitator will face: what does it mean to participate rather than deliver, to research rather than instruct, to be in dialogue with a child rather than in authority over one? The most authoritative contemporary voice on the Reggio approach and the essential companion to The Hundred Languages of Children for anyone building a program in the Department of Childish Revolution tradition.\u003c\/div\u003e\n\u003c\/div\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45860512563398,"sku":null,"price":49.44,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/in-dialogue-with-reggio-emilia.jpg?v=1779290138"}],"url":"https:\/\/punkandpedagogy.com\/collections\/art-as-acction.oembed","provider":"Punk and Pedagogy","version":"1.0","type":"link"}