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Angela Y. Davis is known internationally for her ongoing work to combat all kinds of oppression in the U.S. and abroad. Over the years she has been active as a student teacher, writer, scholar, and activist/organizer. Prof. Davis's political activism began when she was a youngster in Birmingham, Alabama, and continued through her high school years in New York. But it was not until 1969 that she came to national attention after being removed from her teaching position in the Philosophy Department at UCLA as a result of her social activism and her membership in the communist party, USA. Prof. Davis's long-standing commitment to prisoners' rights dates back to her involvement in the campaign to free Soledad Brothers, which led to her own arrest and imprisonment. Today, she remains an advocate of prison abolition and has developed a powerful critique of racism in the criminal justice system. During the last twenty-five years, Prof. Davis has lectured in all of the fifty United States, as well as in Africa, Europe, the Caribbean, South America and the former Soviet Union. Her articles and essays have appeared in numerous journals and anthologies, and she is the author of several books, including Angela Davis: An Autobiography; Women, Race & Class; and the recently published Blues Legacies and Black Feminism: Gertrude "Ma" Rainey, Bessie Smith and Billy Holiday and The Prison-Industrial Complex. Former California Governor Ronald Reagan once vowed that Angela Davis
would never again teach in the University of California system. Today,
she is a tenured professor in the History of Consciousness Department at
the University of California, Santa Cruz. From 1994 to 1997, she held the
distinguished honor of an appointment to the University of California Presidential
Chair in African American and Feminist Studies.
His writings have been translated into Portuguese, Japanese, Spanish, Chinese, Turkish, Polish, German, Bangla, and Dutch. He is the author of fifteen books including:
Howard Zinn (Excert from an interview) He was born in 1922 to Jewish immigrants, and grew up in New York migrating from one broken-down tenement to another. For most of his childhood there was no telephone, no radio, icebox, or shower, often no electricity. He worked as a shipfitter in the Brooklyn Navy Yard. He and his wife moved into a rat-infested basement in Brooklyn. He went to war, where as a second lieutenant he experienced privilege for the first time. At 27 he was as a freshman at New York University. He loaded warehouses. He went to Columbia. He got a job as a professor at Spelman, an all-black women's college in Georgia, and moved his wife and four kids down "among the magnolias." That was long before the Civil Rights Movement. He describes all this in his memoir You Can't Be Neutral on a Moving Train without any trace of remorse or awe, just as an explanation of why he grew up class-conscious. After Spelman he went to Boston University where, as a professor of history, he refused to "pretend to neutrality." There was one particular episode, which he describes in Future of History, that "turned him around politically." Early on, Zinn read a lot of Steinbeck and Dickens, Sinclair, Wright, and Koestler, but his relationship to politics wasn't really galvanized until it clubbed him in the head: "I was a seventeen-year-old kid living in the slums of Brooklyn. There living on the same block were these young communists who were older than I and seemed very politically sophisticated. They asked me to come to a demonstration at Times Square... I wasn't even sure what it was all about, except that vaguely I thought it was against the war. They seemed to be for good causes. I went along... It was like Charlie Chaplin, picking up that red flag, and then there's an army of unemployed behind him in this demonstration... Soon the mounted police, driving their horses into the crowd, beating people. I was knocked unconscious... woke up in a doorway, not only nursing a hurt head, but hurt feelings about our country... There really is no free speech in this country if you are a radical." Maybe not at a Times Square demonstration, but Howard Zinn has since been quietly liberating the radical voices of America's forgotten dead. Soon you might even see some of them dramatized in six two-hour installments on FOX. In the following interview, FEED's Amanda Griscom talks to Zinn from his summer house on Cape Cod. He was 25 feet from the sea, appreciating the breeze, which he offered to email in a little packet along with a bit of salt water. |
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