This course is a gathering place and thought laboratory for people passionate about activism, community organizing, movement building, social transformation, and struggles for liberation. We will read movement manifestoes, theories and histories of revolutionary struggles,mission statements of social justice organizations, and (auto)biographies of leaders. We will also watch and listen to protest footage and protest music. The curriculum spans Abolitionism, Civil Rights, Second-Wave Feminism, Black Power, Indigenous Sovereignty, Gay Liberation, Anti-Colonialism, Anti-Fascism, Reproductive Justice, Environmental Justice, Anti-Apartheid, Occupy, Arab Spring, Black Lives Matter, Palestine Solidarity, and more--emphasizing the roles of young people and students. Throughout, wewill chart the histories of these movements; theorize their characteristics; assess their strengths and shortcomings; and hone our own strategies forcollective resistance and liberation.