Mariska Majoor - United Under a Red Umbrella
Mariska Majoor worked in Amsterdam’s Red Light District as a prostitute in the 1980s. After she quit, she became a well-known activist who tried to improve sex workers’ position in society. She founded PIC (Prostitution Information Center) located in the heart of the old city.
This book, published in 2018, was the result of the work of her and her daughter Robin, traveling to 13 countries across 5 continents to portray sex workers’ struggles and working conditions. The beautiful photography was Robin’s work.
Importantly, sex workers make it clear they don’t need to be rescued from their work. What they do need is legislation that protects them, not to be stigmatised or discriminated, and better living conditions.
The red umbrella is the global symbol for this struggle. Get this book and support PIC!
€29.95

Tony Conrad - Bryant Park Moratorium Rally (1969)
Tony Conrad sat in his Manhattan loft overlooking Bryant Park where an anti-Vietnam rally was taking place. With one microphone pointed at the window and anothe..(read more)
Label: Table of the Elements / TOE 83
Artist: Tony Conrad
Medium: CD
Category: Records & Tapes.
Tags: '60s, Activism, Field Recordings, Sonic Experiments.

Stefanie Schulte Strathaus & Florian Wüst (Ed.) - Wer sagt denn, dass Beton nicht brennt, hast Du’s probiert?
English title: Who says concrete doesn’t burn, have you tried? This bi-lingual book deals with the medium of film and cinema’s position in 1980s West Berlin..(read more)
Publisher: b_books / ISBN 978-3-933557-90-2
Medium: Book
Category: Books & Magazines.
Tags: '80s, Activism, Berlin, Cinema.

Adbusters - # 157: Ultimatum to World Leaders
Trust Adbusters when it comes down to cleaning up the toxic areas of our mental environment, advocating the reverse of the upward flow of wealth, and exposing e..(read more)
Publisher: Adbusters / 157 - Ultimatum to world leaders
Author: Adbusters
Medium: Magazine
Category: Books & Magazines.
Tags: Activism, Criticism, Graphic Art, Magazines, Politics.
