Wednesday, August 30, 2006

DO YOU KNOW THIS MAN?

I recently saw another documentary. I know, I’ve been seeing a lot of them recently. This one is called “You Can't Be Neutral on a Moving Train”. It is a special feature on Howard Zinn. Now, I don’t know about you….but I’ve heard this man’s name for quite a while. HOWARD ZINN. Remember it. I’ve heard AMAZING things about his book "A People's History of the United States"…and I’m not sure what has taken me so long to get off my duff and check him out for myself. Well, I started by renting this documentary. Thanks to my boss, Nick, for bringing it up…again.

Wow! What a powerful speaker. What an educated, peace-loving person. What a political visionary. The film features interviews with Noam Chomsky and Alice Walker, just to name a few...or couple. :)

This is a guy to get acquainted with. I could go on & on…but I believe the article and interview printed in the Boston Globe below says it better. To find out more info on Howard Zinn, go to http://www.howardzinn.org/ .



QUESTIONS FOR HOWARD ZINN
The people's historian
By Joshua Glenn | November 14, 2004

IN 1980, WHEN Boston University historian Howard Zinn published "A People's History of the United States" -- a lively, anti-triumphalist retelling of the story of America from the perspective of the disenfranchised -- it "changed the consciousness of a generation," as Noam Chomsky has put it. Nor has Zinn been content just to write about history. As the recent documentary biography "You Can't Be Neutral on a Moving Train" reminds us, he was active in the early civil rights movement in the South, and in the `60s -- while teaching at BU -- he became a leader of the antiwar movement in Boston.


"A People's History" has sold over a million copies. Now Zinn and co-editor Anthony Arnove bring us "Voices of a People's History of the United States" (Seven Stories), an anthology of speeches, letters, poems, petitions, and songs by Native Americans, fugitive slaves, feminists, activists, and workers -- from a 1542 eyewitness account of the annihilation of the Arawak Indians to statements by families of 9/11 victims opposing the invasion of Iraq. Zinn, 81, spoke with Ideas via telephone from his home in Auburndale.

IDEAS: "Voices" has provocative chapter titles like "Half a Revolution" and "Bush II and the `War on Terror."' Is it fair to say that your version of US history remains as fiercely partisan as ever?

ZINN: Long before I decided to write "A People's History," my partisanship was shaped by my upbringing in a working-class immigrant family, by my three years as a shipyard worker, by my experience as a bombardier in World War II, and by the civil rights movement in the South and the movement against the war in Vietnam. Educators and politicians may say that students ought to learn pure facts, innocent of interpretation, but there's no such thing! So I've chosen to emphasize voices of resistance -- to class oppression, racial injustice, sexual inequality, nationalist arrogance -- left out of the orthodox histories.

IDEAS: One of the chapters in your new book is titled "Challenging Bill Clinton." Clinton is a hero to many Democrats today -- in your opinion, did the left go too easy on Clinton?

ZINN: The moderate left -- liberals -- had high hopes for Clinton and were not prepared to battle against his policies. As a result, Clinton got away with a lot, from the passage of so-called welfare reform to his foreign policy -- he was the first to raise the specter of weapons of mass destruction as an excuse to bomb Iraq. . .. But I was certainly critical of Clinton, and so were others. One of the documents in that chapter is Adrienne Rich's letter refusing the 1997 National Medal for the Arts in protest of the dismantling of welfare.

IDEAS: What's the social effect of leaving "voices of resistance" out of mainstream American histories and standard textbooks?

ZINN: The problem is that when we only hear the voices of important people -- when we only read about presidential policy, congressional legislation, Supreme Court decisions, when we only see wars from the standpoint of generals and admirals, when we only see economic developments through the eyes of the financiers and industrialists -- it suggests that these are the people who will decide what happens to the country. The average person is left in a position of passivity.

IDEAS: Don't presidential elections reflect the will of the people as much as protest movements do?

ZINN: More important, I think, than who sits in the White House is who sits outside it. Whenever social injustices have had to be rectified, they were rectified not at the initiative of the president or Congress or the Supreme Court but because of social movements. . .. Only after thousands of black Americans demonstrated and were beaten, jailed, and killed was segregation in the South done away with. Despite winning the Nobel Peace Prize for it, it was not only Kissinger alone who ended the Vietnam War, but the antiwar movement. . .. The point of publishing the voices of mutineers, rebellious women, labor organizers, pacifists, socialists, is to remind readers that social movements can have an important effect on events -- and that you, too, can join or even lead one.

Joshua Glenn writes the Examined Life column for Ideas.
© Copyright 2006 Globe Newspaper Company.

4 Comments:

Blogger Jules said...

"cause YOU don't know this man!! I don't think you COULD!!!"...ok, reading that headline just sent me down memory lane...BIG NEWS!!!

Thu Aug 31, 11:38:00 PM  
Blogger Alanda said...

That's hilarious! I totally forgot that was a lyric! My brain is for mush! xoxo

Fri Sep 01, 05:54:00 AM  
Blogger Foofa said...

Love Zinn. We were assigned People's History Sr. hear of high school in, obviously history class, and were taking on a trip to Carleton College to see him speak. Wonderful guy. Good to hear he is still getting the props he deserves.

Sun Sep 03, 04:54:00 PM  
Blogger Alanda said...

Thanks Natalie. So cool that you got to hear him speak. Sounds like you had a fabulous teacher in high school! Mr. Zinn deserves many props indeed!

Sun Sep 03, 05:10:00 PM  

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