free things to do in New York City
Free events for Wednesday, 11/27/24
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Free Events, Free Things to Do in New York City!  Read More

November 27, 2024. Free shows, free concerts, free movies, free tours, free readings, worshops, lectures, etc.  are New York's best kept secret! Learn all about it and do not miss the unique opportunities that only New York provides: NYC never ceases to amaze you with quantity and quality of its free culture and free entertainment whether it's day or night, weekday or weekend, summer or winter, spring or fall, January or June, May or September. If you are looking for inexpensive things to do and where to go in Manhattan today, tonight, tomorrow, or any other time, or any other day of any week - you came to the right place: just click on any day on the calendar dispayed on the every page of our site and you will see how many events you can attend in Manhattan free of charge on that very day.

New York's cultural scene is at its busiest in October and March (and the same goes for free events, free things to do), but other months of the year still offer incredible amount of high quality, off the beaten path, unique free events, free things to do which will take your breath away! So if you looking for something to do in April or November, December or February, you will find tons of free things to do, free events to go to. (In June, July and August lots of those free events take place outdoors, of course).

So start using these unique New York City opportunities today, November 27, 2024!

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Where else but in New York City can you listen to a world-class musician, discuss a book with a famous author, take a part in poetry reading, have a glass of wine at an art exhibition opening, and all that on the same day, and all that free of charge, and all of that on any day of the year, whether it's December or July, April or November!

The trick is to know about those free events, free things to do BEFORE they happen, not after the fact. That's where Club Free Time comes in handy! Become a Club Free Time member and start using these unique New York City (NYC) opportunities today, November 27, 2024!

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Club Free Time is your perfect guide to Free Entertainment and Free Culture in the City That Never Sleeps.

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Free things to do, free events that take place in New York City every day of the year are truly amazing. So if you're looking for something interesting to do today (November 27, 2024) or on any other day of the year don't miss those free-of-charge opportunities that only New York provides! You can find lots of high quality, off the beaten path, unique free events, free things to do which will take your breath away!

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In addition to providing information about free events, free things to do in New York City (NYC), Club Free Time offers its members complimentary tickets to classical music concerts, dance performances and theater: when a producer wants that special buzz of the 'full house' - Club Free Time members are welcomed for their enthusiasm and sophistication!

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Get a taste of free culture and free entertainment in New York City (NYC)!

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Experience an entirely new perspective on New York. 'Open up a whole new cultural world... in one of the most vibrant capital cities in the world, sampling cultural delights beyond anyone's wildest dream.' Rupert Parker, journalist, photographer, cameraman, and TV producer
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The quality and quantity of
free events,
free things to do
that happen in New York City
every day of the year
is truly amazing.

So don't miss the opportunities
that only New York provides:
stop wondering what to do;
start taking advantage of
free events to go to,
free things to do in NYC
today!

Discussion | CANCELED***Parallel Lives: Rosa Luxemburg and Hannah Arendt***CANCELED

Friday, October 28, 2022, 7:00 pm

Free

An evening to discuss the lives and works of Hannah Arendt and Rosa Luxemburg. How might their work help us to think about contemporary problems society faces today?

Hannah Arendt was introduced to the work of Rosa Luxemburg by her mother Martha Cohn, who took her to see Luxemburg speak at a general strike rally shortly before she was assassinated by the Freikorps in January 1919. The life and work of Luxemburg left a lasting impression on the young Arendt. Drawing from Luxemburg's work on political economy and imperialism in The Origins of Totalitarianism and her writing on expropriation in The Human Condition, Arendt wrote about modern worldly alienation and what happens when government and economics become inseparable. In her essay, "Rosa Luxemburg," Arendt writes: "What mattered most in her view was reality, in all its wonderful and all its frightful aspects, even more than revolution itself." And yet, Luxemburg was a revolutionary who fought for socioeconomic justice and social democracy. Her biography is one of resistance and revolt. She was a vocal critic of Russian revolutionary and German social democracy rule. Lenin ordered her book, The Russian Revolution, to be burned.

With Seyla Benhabib (Eugene Meyer Professor Emerita of Political Science and Philosophy, Yale University and Senior Research Scholar at Columbia Law School and Center for Contemporary Critical Theory), law professor Drucilla Cornell (co-editor of Creolizing Rosa Luxemburg) and Arendt biographer and Brooklyn Institute faculty Samantha Hill, we'll explore the intersecting lives and works of Luxemburg and Arendt, two 20th-century thinkers whose ostensible differences seem to mask deeper affinities.

This event takes place at:
New York City ( NYC )
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