America: The land of lost causes

Published: April 2, 2021, 5:43 p.m.

b'COVID-19 has put an incredible amount of pressure on higher education and its workers, including graduate students and contingent faculty who shoulder heavy workloads and make poverty-level or near-poverty-level wages. While simultaneously fighting to get universities to recognize them as workers, many graduate students around the U.S. are organizing, demanding, and even going on strike for better wages, benefits, and treatment. In the first segment of this week\\u2019s \\u201cMarc Steiner Show,\\u201d we speak with three graduate workers and organizers about what they\\u2019re fighting for and what these fights mean for the future of higher education: Rithika Ramamurthy, an English Ph.D. candidate at Brown University and president of the Graduate Labor Organization; Harlan Chambers, a Ph.D. student at Columbia University in the Institute of Comparative Literature and Society and member of the Graduate Workers of Columbia - UAW Local 2110 and the Columbia Academic Workers for a Democratic Union caucus; and Dylan Iannitelli, a sixth-year Ph.D. student in Biology at NYU and a steward for the Graduate Student Organizing Committee, the grad worker union at NYU.
Then, in our second segment, we kick off an exciting collaboration with Jacobin magazine by talking with Matthew E. Stanley about his recent series of Jacobin articles on the continued relevance of forgotten or understudied struggles in 19th-century America. Stanley is Assistant Professor of History at Albany State University in Albany, Georgia; he is the author of \\u201cThe Loyal West: War and Reunion in Middle America,\\u201d and he has a new book coming out with the University of Illinois Press called \\u201cGrand Army of Labor: Workers, Veterans, and the Meaning of the Civil War.\\u201d


Tune in for new episodes of The Marc Steiner Show every Friday on TRNN.'