Showing posts with label Civil Rights Movement. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Civil Rights Movement. Show all posts

Monday, January 13, 2014

You Can't Be Neutral on a Moving Train: A Personal History of Our Times by Howard Zinn (beacon Press 1994)




Starting college coincided with a change in our lives: moving out of our miserable basement rooms into a low-income housing project in downtown Manhattan, on the East River. Four rooms, utilities included in the rent, no rats, no cockroaches, a few trees and a playground downstairs, a park along the river. We were happy.

While going to N.Y.U. and Columbia I worked the four-to-twelve shift in the basement of a Manhattan warehouse, loading heavy cartons of clothing onto trailer trucks which would carry them to cities all over the country.

We were an odd crew, we warehouse loaders—a black man, a Honduran immigrant, two men somewhat retarded mentally, another veteran of the war (married, with children, he sold his blood to supplement his small pay check). With us for a while was a young man named Jeff Lawson whose father was John Howard Lawson, a Hollywood writer, one of the Hollywood Ten. There was another young fellow, a Columbia College student who was named after his grandfather, the socialist labor leader Daniel D eLeon. (I encountered him many years later; he was in a bad way mentally, and then I got word that he had laid down under his car in the garage and breathed in enough carbon monoxide to kill himself.)

We were all members of the union (District 65), which had a reputation of being “left-wing.” But we, the truck-loaders, were more left than the union, which seemed hesitant to interfere with the loading operation of this warehouse.

Saturday, January 05, 2008

Howard Zinn's 'A People's History of the United States' 2/8

The second part of the audio book of Howard Zinn's A People's History of the United States, as read by Matt Damon.

It covers such subjects as the aftermath of the Civil Rights Movement, the emergence of such groups as League of Revolutionary Black Workers, and the growing opposition to the Vietnam War:

DOWNLOAD LINK: A People's History (2 of 8)

FILE NAME: a peoples history 2 of 8.mp3

FILE SIZE: ~34.84 megabytes

LENGTH: 50:45

Further Reading on Howard Zinn:

  • Howard Zinn's Official Website
  • Online text of A People's History of the United States
  • Howard Zinn's 'History' comes to TV
  • Howard Zinn's 'Je Ne Suis Pas Marxiste'
  • Pissing Off Dixie

    Tying in with the first part of the audio book of Howard Zinn's 'People History of the United States' is a review in yesterday's New York Times of Glenda Elizabeth Gilmore's 'DEFYING DIXIE The Radical Roots of Civil Rights, 1919-1950'.

    Friday, January 04, 2008

    Howard Zinn's 'A People's History of the United States' 1/8

    Following on from the uploading of the Socialist Thinkers Series, I thought I'd turn my attention to posting the audio book of Howard Zinn's A People's History of the United States, as read by Matt Damon.

    It's in eight parts, so please bear with me.

    A note of information: though the book of the same name covers the period of 1492 onwards, the audio book focuses on the twentieth century. Part one covers the subject of the Civil Rights Movement, and the earlier period of American-African self-organisation in the twenties and thirties:


    DOWNLOAD LINK: A People's History (1 of 8)

    FILE NAME: a peoples history 1 of 8.mp3

    FILE SIZE: ~34.87 megabytes

    LENGTH: 50:47

    Further Reading on Howard Zinn:

  • Howard Zinn's Official Website
  • Online text of A People's History of the United States
  • Howard Zinn's 'History' comes to TV
  • Howard Zinn's 'Je Ne Suis Pas Marxiste'