Publishing Activism within/without a Toxic University: new open access booklet

GH
Gary Hall
Wed, Jun 11, 2025 11:41 AM

Announcing the latest title in Open Humanities Press' Combinatorial
Books: Gathering Flowers series:

/Publishing Activism within/without a Toxic University/

edited by the Radical Open Access Collective

https://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/publishing-activism-within-without-a-toxic-university/

Co-published by Post Office Press (POP)
(https://hcommons.org/members/pop/) and Open Humanities Press, this
experimental booklet brings together reflections from Radical Open
Access (https://radicaloa.postdigitalcultures.org/) members on
publishing activism and its relationship to the neoliberal university.
Created as a side project to the Radical Open Access III: From Openness
to Social Justice Activism conference
(https://radicaloa.postdigitalcultures.org/conferences/radicaloa3/), it
explores how publishing can respond to the ongoing crisis in higher
education. The authors ask: How can we – as scholars, publishers and
activists – engage with a university in perpetual crisis? How can we
practice publishing activism within/without a toxic institution?

Inspired by the cadavre exquis technique of the Surrealists, the booklet
adapts and (ab)uses this method to foster collaborative, responsive
writing. It shows how multiple, potentially conflicting voices can
coalesce around a shared crisis and move activist strategies forward in
new ways.

It draws from three key ROAC titles published under open licenses: The
Undercommons (Minor Compositions: https://www.minorcompositions.info/),
Luescher, Klemenčič, and Jowi’s Student Politics in Africa (African
Minds:
https://www.africanminds.co.za/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/9781928331223_txt.pdf),
and Conio’s (ed.) Occupy: A People Yet to Come (Open Humanities Press:
https://openhumanitiespress.org/books/download/Conio_2015_Occupy-A-People-Yet-To-Come.pdf).
These works, reflecting on protest, activism and student politics,
served as a starting point for examining higher education through the
lens of social justice publishing activism. The first text in the
booklet directly responds to these books, initiating a chain of
responses, each written within ten days. Contributors extended the
preceding response, engaging with the booklet’s theme and, optionally,
the ROAC back-catalogue. Designed by Alex Trencianska, Mia Dawson, and
Lisha Wang, the booklet was 'unfolded' during the 3rd Radical Open
Access Conference.

Editor Bio

Formed in 2015, the Radical Open Access Collective is a community of
scholar-led, not-for-profit presses, journals and other open access
projects. Now consisting of more than 80 members, we promote a
progressive vision for open publishing in the humanities and social
sciences. What we have in common is an understanding of open access as
being characterised by a spirit of ongoing creative experimentation. We
also share a willingness to subject some of our most established
scholarly communication practices to creative critique, together with
the institutions that sustain them (the university, the library, the
publishing house, and so on). The collective thus offers a radical
‘alternative’ to the conservative versions of open access that are
currently being put forward by commercially-oriented presses, funders,
and policy makers.

Like all Open Humanities Press titles, /Publishing Activism
within/without a Toxic University/ is available open access (and can be
downloaded for free):

https://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/publishing-activism-within-without-a-toxic-university/

--
Gary Hall
Professor of Media
Centre for Postdigital Cultures, Coventry University:
https://postdigitalcultures.org/about/

Director of Open Humanities Press:http://www.openhumanitiespress.org
Websitehttp://www.garyhall.info
Blog:http://garyhall.squarespace.com/journal/
Mastodon: @garyhall@hcommons.social

Latest:

Book: Masked Media: What It Means to Be Human in the Age of Artificial Creative Intelligence:http://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/masked-media/

Blog posts: 'So That's Where Theory's Got To - It's Living Above The Shop':http://garyhall.squarespace.com/journal/2025/5/15/so-thats-where-theorys-got-to-its-living-above-the-shop.html?SSScrollPosition=134

'Radical Open Access III: What Do We Not Think About When We Think About Money?':http://www.garyhall.info/journal/2025/4/14/what-do-we-not-think-about-when-we-think-about-money.html

Recommended: RRB #13 commemorates Fredric Jameson; RRB #14 features Jameson's 2024 book, The Years of Theory: Postwar French Thought to the Present: in the AI 'magazine' Robot Review of Books:https://www.robotreviewofbooks.org/

Announcing the latest title in Open Humanities Press' Combinatorial Books: Gathering Flowers series: /Publishing Activism within/without a Toxic University/ edited by the Radical Open Access Collective https://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/publishing-activism-within-without-a-toxic-university/ Co-published by Post Office Press (POP) (https://hcommons.org/members/pop/) and Open Humanities Press, this experimental booklet brings together reflections from Radical Open Access (https://radicaloa.postdigitalcultures.org/) members on publishing activism and its relationship to the neoliberal university. Created as a side project to the Radical Open Access III: From Openness to Social Justice Activism conference (https://radicaloa.postdigitalcultures.org/conferences/radicaloa3/), it explores how publishing can respond to the ongoing crisis in higher education. The authors ask: How can we – as scholars, publishers and activists – engage with a university in perpetual crisis? How can we practice publishing activism within/without a toxic institution? Inspired by the cadavre exquis technique of the Surrealists, the booklet adapts and (ab)uses this method to foster collaborative, responsive writing. It shows how multiple, potentially conflicting voices can coalesce around a shared crisis and move activist strategies forward in new ways. It draws from three key ROAC titles published under open licenses: The Undercommons (Minor Compositions: https://www.minorcompositions.info/), Luescher, Klemenčič, and Jowi’s Student Politics in Africa (African Minds: https://www.africanminds.co.za/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/9781928331223_txt.pdf), and Conio’s (ed.) Occupy: A People Yet to Come (Open Humanities Press: https://openhumanitiespress.org/books/download/Conio_2015_Occupy-A-People-Yet-To-Come.pdf). These works, reflecting on protest, activism and student politics, served as a starting point for examining higher education through the lens of social justice publishing activism. The first text in the booklet directly responds to these books, initiating a chain of responses, each written within ten days. Contributors extended the preceding response, engaging with the booklet’s theme and, optionally, the ROAC back-catalogue. Designed by Alex Trencianska, Mia Dawson, and Lisha Wang, the booklet was 'unfolded' during the 3rd Radical Open Access Conference. Editor Bio Formed in 2015, the Radical Open Access Collective is a community of scholar-led, not-for-profit presses, journals and other open access projects. Now consisting of more than 80 members, we promote a progressive vision for open publishing in the humanities and social sciences. What we have in common is an understanding of open access as being characterised by a spirit of ongoing creative experimentation. We also share a willingness to subject some of our most established scholarly communication practices to creative critique, together with the institutions that sustain them (the university, the library, the publishing house, and so on). The collective thus offers a radical ‘alternative’ to the conservative versions of open access that are currently being put forward by commercially-oriented presses, funders, and policy makers. Like all Open Humanities Press titles, /Publishing Activism within/without a Toxic University/ is available open access (and can be downloaded for free): https://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/publishing-activism-within-without-a-toxic-university/ -- Gary Hall Professor of Media Centre for Postdigital Cultures, Coventry University: https://postdigitalcultures.org/about/ Director of Open Humanities Press:http://www.openhumanitiespress.org Websitehttp://www.garyhall.info Blog:http://garyhall.squarespace.com/journal/ Mastodon: @garyhall@hcommons.social Latest: Book: Masked Media: What It Means to Be Human in the Age of Artificial Creative Intelligence:http://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/masked-media/ Blog posts: 'So That's Where Theory's Got To - It's Living Above The Shop':http://garyhall.squarespace.com/journal/2025/5/15/so-thats-where-theorys-got-to-its-living-above-the-shop.html?SSScrollPosition=134 'Radical Open Access III: What Do We Not Think About When We Think About Money?':http://www.garyhall.info/journal/2025/4/14/what-do-we-not-think-about-when-we-think-about-money.html Recommended: RRB #13 commemorates Fredric Jameson; RRB #14 features Jameson's 2024 book, The Years of Theory: Postwar French Thought to the Present: in the AI 'magazine' Robot Review of Books:https://www.robotreviewofbooks.org/