{"title":"Builders \u0026 Healers","description":"\u003cp\u003ePeople who transgressed systems to repair and create. Indigenous knowledge-keepers, freedom fighters, movement-builders. Those who made something better against all odds.\u003c\/p\u003e","products":[{"product_id":"braiding-sweetgrass","title":"Braiding Sweetgrass","description":"\u003cp\u003e\u003cmeta charset=\"utf-8\"\u003e\u003cmeta charset=\"utf-8\"\u003e\u003cspan\u003eKimmerer is a Potawatomi botanist who writes about plants the way her ancestors did — as beings with agency, intelligence, and gifts to offer. This is not a nature book. It is a dispatch from inside an Indigenous scientific tradition that Western botany spent two centuries trying to erase. She writes about asters and goldenrod, about the honorable harvest, about what it means to learn from a place rather than extract from it. The most quietly revolutionary book about the relationship between humans and the natural world written in the last twenty years.\u003c\/span\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45620297531590,"sku":null,"price":22.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/braiding-sweetgrass.webp?v=1773343489"},{"product_id":"unbowed","title":"Unbowed","description":"\u003cp\u003e\u003cmeta charset=\"utf-8\"\u003eMaathai founded the Green Belt Movement in 1977 — training rural Kenyan women to plant trees, restore degraded land, and in doing so reclaim their dignity and political agency. The Kenyan government imprisoned her, beat her, tried to destroy her. She kept planting. This memoir is the dispatch from inside a life that understood that the land and the people are the same question. The most hopeful book on the East Africa shelf and the most practically radical.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45652586987718,"sku":null,"price":20.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/unbowed.webp?v=1774460516"},{"product_id":"long-walk-to-freedom","title":"Long Walk to Freedom","description":"\u003cp\u003e\u003cmeta charset=\"utf-8\"\u003eMandela wrote much of this autobiography on Robben Island, hiding pages in the garden. It covers his childhood in the Transkei, his radicalization, the founding of the ANC's armed wing, his trial, his imprisonment, and the negotiations that ended apartheid. The most important political memoir of the 20th century and the most honest dispatch from inside one of history's most improbable acts of moral leadership. Not hagiography — Mandela is honest about his failures, his marriages, his compromises. The full human being.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45653009137862,"sku":null,"price":24.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/long-walk-to-freedom.webp?v=1774479953"},{"product_id":"ceremony","title":"Ceremony","description":"\u003cdiv class=\"field\"\u003e\n\u003cdiv class=\"field-value\"\u003eTayo is a Laguna Pueblo veteran returning from WWII — the Pacific theater, Japanese faces that kept becoming the faces of his uncles, a war the US government needed him to fight but couldn't integrate him into as a full human being on his return. Silko weaves the novel between Tayo's psychological unraveling and the Laguna ceremonial tradition that slowly heals him. The land is not metaphor. The ceremony is not symbol. Both are literal and necessary. The first novel published by a Native American woman and still the most formally complete.\u003c\/div\u003e\n\u003c\/div\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45663400788166,"sku":null,"price":18.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/ceremony.jpg?v=1774905672"},{"product_id":"potiki","title":"Potiki","description":"\u003cdiv class=\"field\"\u003e\n\u003cdiv class=\"field-value\"\u003eA Māori community on the New Zealand coast resists a developer who wants to build a tourist resort on their ancestral land. Grace tells the story through multiple voices — the family, the marae, the carved ancestors who speak from the meeting house — weaving Māori oral tradition into the novel's structure. The land is not a setting. It is a character. The community's relationship with it is spiritual, legal, historical, and ongoing. The most politically precise New Zealand novel on this shelf and the one that most clearly articulates the Māori argument about sovereignty — not as a legal claim but as a relationship with a place.\u003c\/div\u003e\n\u003c\/div\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45666298233030,"sku":null,"price":24.15,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/potiki.jpg?v=1774966684"},{"product_id":"the-dream-keepers","title":"The Dreamkeepers","description":"\u003cdiv class=\"field\"\u003e\n\u003cdiv class=\"field-value\"\u003eLadson-Billings spent years in classrooms studying eight teachers — some Black, some white — who were extraordinarily successful with African American students in a school system that had largely written those students off. What they shared was not a technique but a philosophy: culturally relevant pedagogy, the belief that a child's culture is not an obstacle to learning but its foundation. These teachers built on what their students already knew, connected curriculum to lived experience, and treated their students as intellectuals rather than deficits. The most important education research book ever written about teaching Black children and the one that most clearly shows that the failure is never in the students — it is in a system that refuses to see them. Essential reading for every teacher and every parent in the P\u0026amp;P audience.\u003c\/div\u003e\n\u003c\/div\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45815290069190,"sku":null,"price":24.95,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/the-dreamkeepers.jpg?v=1777916955"},{"product_id":"mutual-aid-a-factor-of-evolution","title":"Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution","description":"\u003cdiv class=\"field\"\u003e\n\u003cdiv class=\"field-value\"\u003eDarwin's theory of evolution was hijacked almost immediately by Social Darwinists who used it to argue that competition, hierarchy, and the strong crushing the weak were natural law — and therefore that capitalism was simply biology. Kropotkin spent years in Siberia watching animals survive brutal conditions and came back with a different answer: cooperation, not competition, is the dominant survival strategy across nature and human history. Mutual Aid is his evidence — from ants to medieval guilds to peasant communes — that the capacity for solidarity is not naive idealism but the most basic fact of how living things survive. His biological observations have since been validated by evolutionary biologists including Stephen Jay Gould. The most subversive scientific argument ever made against capitalism's foundational myth and the intellectual backbone of everything the Make Something Better arc is building toward. Goldman refused the state. Kropotkin explained why cooperation is what we return to when the state gets out of the way.\u003c\/div\u003e\n\u003c\/div\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45823905661126,"sku":null,"price":12.95,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/mutual-aid.webp?v=1778102786"},{"product_id":"rules-for-radicals","title":"Rules for Radicals","description":"\u003cdiv class=\"field\"\u003e\n\u003cdiv class=\"field-value\"\u003eAlinsky dedicated this to Lucifer — the first radical known to man who rebelled against the establishment and won his own kingdom. That tells you everything about his tone. The book itself is a practical manual for building power among people who have none: thirteen rules drawn from decades of community organizing in Chicago's meatpacking districts and South Side neighborhoods, documented with the rigor of someone who had watched what worked and what didn't across a lifetime of practice. Make the enemy live up to their own rules. Ridicule is your most potent weapon. A good tactic is one your people enjoy. Power is not only what you have but what the enemy thinks you have. These are not cynical instructions — they are honest about how change actually happens versus how civics class says it does. The FBI surveilled Alinsky for years. His opponents used his name as a slur, which is one of the more reliable indicators that someone named something true. The most practical book on the Make Something Better shelf — the one that answers the question every reader of Goldman and Kropotkin eventually asks: but what do we actually do on Monday morning? The tactics are tools, not values — P\u0026amp;P situates them in the tradition of justice organizing, not power consolidation.\u003c\/div\u003e\n\u003c\/div\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45824016449734,"sku":null,"price":20.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/rules-for-radicals.png?v=1778105844"},{"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":"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":"care-work","title":"Care Work","description":"\u003cdiv class=\"field\"\u003e\n\u003cdiv class=\"field-value\"\u003ePiepzna-Samarasinha wrote much of this book from bed — on a heating pad, in old sleep pants, alongside other sick and disabled writers making culture from the same position. The preface makes clear that this is not incidental but the point: writing from bed is a time-honored crip way of being an activist, and the book is itself an enactment of the access politics it describes. The essays move through the history and practice of disability justice — a movement that centers sick and disabled queer, trans, Black, and brown people — through care webs, collective access, crip emotional intelligence, the specific labor of femmes in movement work, suicidal ideation, and what radically accessible performance spaces actually look like in practice. Piepzna-Samarasinha's argument is that access is not a checklist or an accommodation tacked on afterward but a form of love — that building communities where no one is left behind is both the means and the end of liberation work. The most important disability justice book on the P\u0026amp;P shelf and the one that most directly extends the Mutual Aid and Hood Feminism arguments into the specific experience of sick and disabled people of color. Lambda Literary Award winner.\u003c\/div\u003e\n\u003c\/div\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45853532684486,"sku":null,"price":21.95,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/care-work.webp?v=1779126190"},{"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"},{"product_id":"leaving-the-fold","title":"Leaving the Fold","description":"\u003cdiv class=\"field\"\u003e\n\u003cdiv class=\"field-value\"\u003eWinell grew up the daughter of a missionary, had a genuine born-again experience, and then spent the next phase of her life figuring out what it cost her — before spending twenty-eight years as a psychologist helping others do the same. She coined the term Religious Trauma Syndrome to name what happens to people who leave authoritarian religion: the grief, the identity crisis, the loss of community, the shame, the specific disorientation of having your entire framework for meaning suddenly removed. This is the only self-help psychology book written specifically for people recovering from toxic religion — not those questioning their faith while remaining comfortable, but those who have left or are leaving and need concrete tools for the specific work of rebuilding a self that was organized entirely around beliefs you no longer hold. The recovery and rebuilding book in the coercive control bundle: Combating Cult Mind Control names the mechanism by which groups capture people's reality, Leaving the Fold shows what it takes to reclaim it. Essential for anyone doing deconstruction work — from fundamentalist Christianity specifically or from any authoritarian religious structure — and for the therapists, family members, and community organizers who support them.\u003c\/div\u003e\n\u003c\/div\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45886768218310,"sku":null,"price":24.95,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/leaving-the-fold.webp?v=1779908866"},{"product_id":"mutual-aid-building-solidarity-during-this-crisis-and-the-next","title":"Mutual Aid: Building Solidarity During This Crisis (and the Next)","description":"\u003cdiv class=\"field\"\u003e\n\u003cdiv class=\"field-value\"\u003eKropotkin called mutual aid a factor in evolution. The Black Panther Party called it survival pending revolution. Spade — lawyer, trans activist, co-founder of the Sylvia Rivera Law Project — calls it the practical foundation of every social movement that has ever actually worked. This book makes the distinction that matters: mutual aid is not charity. Charity flows from those with resources to those without and leaves the power structure intact. Mutual aid is people in struggle sharing what they have, building relationships of solidarity, refusing to let each other be disposed of by the systems designed to dispose of them. Spade draws on decades of organizing to provide both the theory and the tools — how to work in groups without burning out, how to make collective decisions, how to address conflict, how to build something that lasts beyond the crisis that created it. Short, dense, immediately actionable. The contemporary companion to Kropotkin's Mutual Aid on the shelf — Kropotkin provides the evolutionary and historical evidence, Spade provides the Monday morning practice. Essential for the borders and belonging bundle: when governments fail or actively harm immigrant and borderlands communities, mutual aid is what communities build to survive and resist.\u003c\/div\u003e\n\u003c\/div\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45902990868678,"sku":null,"price":15.95,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/mutual-aid_d4b49de3-29fd-476f-92c9-286f31275b7f.webp?v=1780361639"}],"url":"https:\/\/punkandpedagogy.com\/collections\/builders-healers.oembed","provider":"Punk and Pedagogy","version":"1.0","type":"link"}