An anarchist collective, around the corner
Pat Tarantino
Issue date: 2/7/08 Section: City Pulse
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Today, Parsons' revolutionary message lives on only minutes away from Northeastern at the Lucy Parsons Center, a nonprofit, collectively-run radical bookstore and community meeting space located at 549 Columbus Ave.
Curious visitors find the center stocked with periodicals from an array of leftist ideologies and interest groups - from "CounterPunch", a D.C.-based muckraking newsletter, to "2600," a self-described "hacker quarterly," to dozens of homemade zines.
The center also offers a comprehensive book selection packed tightly onto shelves adorned with radical posters and slogans. Topics include biographies of revolutionaries, critiques of the current administration and guides offering information on demonstration tactics.
"It's really important to have a space like this, where we have a really different selection of books you can't find in most other stores," said Molly Adelstein, a 25-year-old Boston resident and member of the center. "It's interesting reading; [there are] things that you don't see all the time."
The center first opened its doors as a one-room shop in Central Square amid the flowering social movements of the 1960s, offering information and meeting space to Boston's activist community. It moved several times throughout its history before coming to rest in the South End in 1992.
While the center has seen considerable change during its history, the collective mentality that governs its operations has remained the same, members said.
"It's group decision making, theoretically no hierarchies," said Jay Schiede of Cambridge, a 58-year-old musician and 12-year center member. "We try to be non-hierarchical by law, by our own guidelines."
Although historically tied to anarchist and Maoist groups, the collective displays a broad spectrum of political ideologies. Schiede described the center as "non-sectarian."
It serves as a meeting place for a wide range of activist groups, notable among them are The Industrial Workers of The World and the Socialist Party of Boston, both of which gather for monthly debates and exchanges.
"We like to use the word radical," Schiede said. "I'm not sure all the groups qualify as 'radical,' but most of them are for sure."
The center is governed by a bi-weekly steering committee made up of volunteers with at least six weeks of volunteer experience. During these meetings, members take turns directing the conversation and recording notes in an attempt to share responsibility with new members, discuss the operation of the store and review requests for use of the space from outside organizations.
2008 Woodie Awards

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Chris Knighton
posted 2/07/08 @ 1:25 PM EST
Great place. Definitely check the Lucy Parson Center sometime if you are interested in learning about or getting involved in radical/progressive social and political movements. (Continued…)
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