This weekend I gave a speech on human rights at the UN.
Really!
But first, a stop at the Republic of Korea's permanent mission, with a lobby installation by one of my favorite video artists:
![18698056_10158796545725385_8936482141673580761_n 18698056_10158796545725385_8936482141673580761_n]()
![18622303_10158796545780385_6224262189622297595_n 18622303_10158796545780385_6224262189622297595_n]()
![18700126_10158796545805385_8391405783687311436_n 18700126_10158796545805385_8391405783687311436_n]()
Then off to the UN, for real.![18671325_10158796800515385_1378229467866599897_n 18671325_10158796800515385_1378229467866599897_n]()
See?
The seminar was about Gwangju Diary and the Gwangju Uprising. (The Uprising is an official UNESCO Memory of the World.) We got in a lot of Korean news media, including one report which caught me on my phone.
I was told, moments before my talk, not to say the "M-word" (Marxism) or the "s-word" (socialism), so had to quickly rewrite my talk about human existence divorced from both state and market, which luckily happened to dovetail with the novel of Gwangju I'd just read, Human Acts by Han Kang. (So my phone came in handy.)
And I got to wear a simultaneous interpretation earcup!![18664246_10158797024665385_8283260853915088165_n 18664246_10158797024665385_8283260853915088165_n]()
Unfortunately, no matter how many times I pressed "NO" the UN remained a tool of Western imperialist interests.![18623573_10158797280500385_3859647298615902938_o 18623573_10158797280500385_3859647298615902938_o]()
The upside to all this is that Gwangju Diary's new publisher in perpetuity, the 5.18 Memorial Foundation, will soon make the book freely available to interested parties.
Really!
But first, a stop at the Republic of Korea's permanent mission, with a lobby installation by one of my favorite video artists:



Then off to the UN, for real.

See?
The seminar was about Gwangju Diary and the Gwangju Uprising. (The Uprising is an official UNESCO Memory of the World.) We got in a lot of Korean news media, including one report which caught me on my phone.
I was told, moments before my talk, not to say the "M-word" (Marxism) or the "s-word" (socialism), so had to quickly rewrite my talk about human existence divorced from both state and market, which luckily happened to dovetail with the novel of Gwangju I'd just read, Human Acts by Han Kang. (So my phone came in handy.)
And I got to wear a simultaneous interpretation earcup!

Unfortunately, no matter how many times I pressed "NO" the UN remained a tool of Western imperialist interests.

The upside to all this is that Gwangju Diary's new publisher in perpetuity, the 5.18 Memorial Foundation, will soon make the book freely available to interested parties.