Barnaby Raine - Profile on Academia.edu (original) (raw)

Barnaby Raine

Rudi Batzell related author profile picture

Lindsey Dayton related author profile picture

Annelise Orleck related author profile picture

Jonathan Grossman related author profile picture

Elizabeth Anderson related author profile picture

Judith Wishnia related author profile picture

David Ost related author profile picture

Dorothy Sue Cobble related author profile picture

Rogers Smith related author profile picture

Rachel Donaldson related author profile picture

Uploads

Papers by Barnaby Raine

Research paper thumbnail of The New Speech Politics

International Labor and Working-Class History, 2018

In engaging the popularity of “free speech” as a conservative battle cry in recent years, this ar... more In engaging the popularity of “free speech” as a conservative battle cry in recent years, this article poses two questions: What particular conception of that demand does the right defend, and how should the left respond? Finding that conservatives have moved from a “negative” to a “positive” understanding of this freedom selectively applied, this article presents the consistent application of that positive understanding of free speech as a challenge to concentrations of power that conspire to privilege some speech over others. Turning to recent attempts by graduate students on North American campuses to unionize, the article attempts to ground a reading of union rights as free speech rights. Free speech is presented as a useful frame through which to think about political struggles more generally, though the article cautions against treating free speech as an invariably desirable principle.

Research paper thumbnail of The New Speech Politics

International Labor and Working-Class History, 2018

In engaging the popularity of “free speech” as a conservative battle cry in recent years, this ar... more In engaging the popularity of “free speech” as a conservative battle cry in recent years, this article poses two questions: What particular conception of that demand does the right defend, and how should the left respond? Finding that conservatives have moved from a “negative” to a “positive” understanding of this freedom selectively applied, this article presents the consistent application of that positive understanding of free speech as a challenge to concentrations of power that conspire to privilege some speech over others. Turning to recent attempts by graduate students on North American campuses to unionize, the article attempts to ground a reading of union rights as free speech rights. Free speech is presented as a useful frame through which to think about political struggles more generally, though the article cautions against treating free speech as an invariably desirable principle.

Log In