Brian MacKenzie Infoshop explained

The Brian MacKenzie Infoshop was a self-managed social center located at 1426 Ninth St., in the Shaw neighborhood of Washington, D.C.[1] The volunteer-run anarchist co-operative ran the basement infoshop from May 2003 until December 2008. For the first four years, it was open every day to sell books and records. It also served as a community center, hangout, and meeting place for local radicals.[2] Events included talks by Ward Churchill, Mattilda Bernstein Sycamore, Nate Powell and Josh MacPhee.[3] [4]

The infoshop shared a building with offices for the Gray Panthers, Emmaus, the InterFaith Conference of Metropolitan Washington and a Catholic Worker bookshop.[5] Its lease was co-signed by Ian MacKaye of Fugazi and it was named for an American University student active in the radical community who died of a heart seizure at a D.C. hardcore show at the Wilson Center in 1999. Participants in the local activist organization Positive Force were amongst the founders, and the co-ordinators were brothers Ryan and Wade Fletcher.[6] [7]

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Anarchist Hangout Surrendering to Market Forces. Lowman. Stephen. December 8, 2008. The Washington Post. B06. 2009-02-28.
  2. News: Fernandez. Manny. July 14, 2003. Ithaca Journal.
  3. News: Entertainment . Readings, lectures, workshops and more . Washington Post . 31 October 2004.
  4. News: July 6-11, 2004 . Washington Post . 4 July 2004.
  5. News: Reel . M. . Seniors, peaceniks, punks set to share turf in shaw; center targets groups' common ground. The Washington Post . 22 February 2003.
  6. News: Paarlberg . Mike . Don't Get Nostalgic: Mark Andersen on the 30th Anniversary of the Wilson Center . 2 October 2019 . Washington City Paper . 30 April 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20191002211003/https://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/arts/music/blog/13075556/dont-get-nostalgic-mark-andersen-on-the-30th-anniversary-of-the-wilson-center . 2 October 2019 . en.
  7. Web site: Schweitzer . Ally . Too Punk For TV: Positive Force Documentary To Premiere In D.C. . 25 January 2022.