Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts

Sunday, June 17, 2012

Oakland, NYC and SF book releases for Marilyn Buck's Selected Poems

Sunday June 17th, in Oakland
A Book Party Celebrating the Poetry and Life of
Marilyn Buck, Political Prisoner and Writer
Inside / Out: Selected Poems

Speakers include:
Kiilu Nyasha, elana levy, Maria Poblet and Zoe Willmott

3:00-5:00 p.m. Sunday June 17, 2012
Eastside Cultural Center
2277 International Blvd.
Oakland CA 94606
www.eastsideartsalliance.com

Co-sponsored by The Friends of Marilyn Buck

----------
Wednesday June 27 in New York City
A Book Release Celebration For
Inside / Out: Selected Poems by Marilyn Buck

With Asha Bandele, Dequi Kioni-Sadiki, Ona Mirkinson,
Susan Rosenberg, Laura Whitehorn
& a message from political prisoner Sekou Odinga

7:00-9:00 p.m. Wednesday June 27, 2012
Bluestockings 172 Allen St, Manhattan

In honor of Marilyn: bring a book for a prisoner.
In recognition of Marilyn's long commitment to educating herself and
other women in prison we ask you to bring a paperback book as a
donation for Books Through Bars. Especially needed are dictionaries
(English and Spanish) and Black and Latino/a (especially Chicano/a) histories.

----------
Wednesday June 27 in San Francisco
Celebrating the release of
Inside / Out: Selected Poems by Marilyn Buck

Please join us in paying tribute to
an important activist and woman of letters.
Graciela Trevisan, Nellie Wong and Maria Poblet
celebrate Marilyn Buck.

7:00-9:00 p.m. Wednesday June 27, 2012
Modern Times Bookstore
2919 24th Street, San Francisco 94110
----------

Inside/Out: Selected Poems by Marilyn Buck with a preface by David
Meltzer: this collection of Marilyn's searing and lyrical poetry is a
living tribute to her indomitable spirit and revolutionary intelligence.

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Listen, Whitey! Talking With Author Pat Thomas About the Black Panthers

After moving to Oakland in 2000, Pat Thomas started reading about the Black Panther Party and hanging out with some of the Panthers still living in Oakland. such as David Hilliard, who had been their Chief of Staff and Elaine Brown, who was the first woman Chairman of the Party. A musician, music journalist and reissue producer, Thomas started to think about the impact of the Black Power movement on popular culture, and uncovered dozens of rare/out of print/forgotten Black Power recordings in jazz, soul, poetry, speeches, interviews, and pop music.

With the material he found, Thomas wrote Listen, Whitey! The Sights and Sounds of Black Power 1965-1975, a newly released coffee table book about the art and music of the Black Power Movement. It offers reproductions of flyers, album covers by artists such as Gil Scott-Heron and The Last Poets, and advertisements and photographs from the black power era. The book also chronicles little known history such as the Black Forum label, a part of Motown that released politically charged albums by Langston Hughes, Ossie Davis, Bill Cosby and others, and an 1971 episode of the musical comedy show The Partridge Family, where the family and some members of the Panthers perform a song together in Detroit.

Light In The Attic Records is presenting the companion soundtrack to the book, with 16 tracks, including Stokely Carmichael’s “Free Huey” speech, a piece by comedian Dick Gregory, Elaine Brown’s “Until We’re Free,” Gil Scott Heron’s “Winter in America,” and Bob Dylan’s out of print single “George Jackson.”

Thomas talked with Alternet about writing a good chunk of the book in just two weeks after years of research, how Huey Newton went to China before Richard Nixon, and how the Panthers walking around with rifles will always get headlines over the Panthers feeding kids a free breakfast.

You grew up in upstate New York. Were you always interested in the Black Panthers or did that start when you lived in Oakland?

My interest in the Panthers did not come out or explode or start until I moved to Oakland in 2000. I have always been interested in counterculture and Oakland is the birthplace of the Panthers, so over a period of years, I started reading books and tracking some of them down, and the whole process was very organic, I wasn’t trying to do an academic project or write a book. I just wanted to hang out with them.

How receptive were they?

They were receptive because I was not interviewing them. I never stuck a microphone in anybody’s face. I never conducted formal interviews. I really got to know them as friends- we’d occasionally go out to dinner or have lunch. Obviously they knew I was curious about their history. I’d read books, and ask them about some incident and they’d tell me their version or what really happening or what have you. The best way I can describe it is let’s say, 20 years ago Norman Mailer moved next door to you. You’d say, “Well, I’m going to start bending Norman Mailer’s ear when I see him out watering his flowers.” I just saw an opportunity – I’ve always been enamored with the '60s, so rather than watch a documentary on TV, this way I got to hear it straight from the people who lived it. I was just enjoying it.

Because of your music background, was it the music that people were involved with that interested you initially?

It became a spin-off. Elaine Brown was the only Black Panther that made music and recorded albums. Eventually I got to know her and kind of picked her brain about her music activity. Music became a natural extension. Just like I was interested in the hippie culture, and from that I got into all kinds of psychedelic and classic rock. From the Black Panthers, I got interested in all kind of militant soul and jazz and stuff. With the music research I kind of went off on my own tangent and a lot of that was little scraps of information on someone’s blog or on the back of an album cover. That research became sort of intermittent and often tedious.

Tedious because it was hard to track stuff down?

Tedious in a way that was both exciting and nerve wracking. Part of me was like, “I hope I don’t find another album,” and part of me was like, “I hope I find another album.” The book was turned in a year late, but that provided me with probably another 50 albums, so the book was that much better by being late.

You said you didn’t go into this research planning to write a book. What was point you decided you wanted to write one?

In 2008, I was in college, and I had the summer off, and I had time on my hands. I don’t feel like I wrote the book because I wanted to – I feel like I needed to. I just sat down and in a two-week period, for about 10 hours a day, I just wrote and wrote and wrote. By that point, I had done so much research, that except to refer to a book for a quick fact check or a quick date, it was kind of all in my brain. After two weeks, I had 30,000 to 40,000 words, and I was just exhausted, and I didn’t look at the manuscript for about six months after that because I was kind of drained.

What did you feel like you really wanted people to get from this book about the Black Power movement?

Well, for obvious reasons most of what has been written has been very political or analytical or academic. You know, almost any book about history is going to have the author’s particular bias. If you’re a military historian trying to write a book about World War II, that’s your bias. I was trying to write a book that was pro-Panthers, but not with an agenda as to what I wanted to say other than to sort of humanize these people. To me they were more than just statues frozen in time; they were people I was hanging out with in current day. I just wanted to capture their humanity in some way. Militancy or their strident side was just one part of it. I wanted to focus on how their legacy crossed paths with pop culture. You know, I talk about this wacky "Partridge Family" episode where they meet the Black Panthers. It’s not a dogmatic book. Most stores will file it under music – it could be filed under political culture. I didn’t want it to be filed under black history/sociology. It’s meant to be, for lack of a better word, fun.

You say you wanted to show the Panthers' warm fuzzy side.

At the time it was happening, it doesn’t make for controversial or exciting news for the front page of the New York Times or Time Magazine. In other words, if the Panthers are rolling down the street with rifles, that’s front-page news. If the Panthers are feeding schoolchildren a free breakfast, that’s on page 20. That’s still the way it is. Controversy is what sells papers. I follow the Occupy movement, and what tends to get attention? It’s when protestors burn down a Bank of America building. It’s never going to be protestors have been living peacefully in this camp for three weeks and everybody is loving it.

You make a point in the book about how young the Panthers are.

As a young person and a teenager I’d watch Woodstock and I’d think everybody playing Woodstock must have been about 35. No, everybody playing Woodstock was about 22. As I started doing the Panther research, I realized these were young people. They were in their early 20s, most of them self educated, maybe a couple of years of community college, obviously no Internet, and somehow they created a worldwide movement. Huey Newton went to Red China and met the Chinese government in 1971, a year before Richard Nixon made his famous trip which went around the world like, America finally breaks into Communist China and talks to them after 50 years or whatever it had been. Well, Jesus Christ, the Panthers did it the year before. I mean, that’s amazing. A couple of black kids from Oakland are in fucking China hanging out with the Chinese Premier. People forget this was such an amazing grassroots movement and quite successful for a bunch of young people who were not rich, did not have money, didn’t have masters degrees, they were just doing it.

You bring up things most people don’t know about like The Partridge Family episode and the Motown label, Black Forum. For you what was the most surprising thing you found doing research?

Their youth was one thing that hit me, but also the fact that most of them came through, at least through the '60s and '70s. I mean, a lot of people died along the way, Huey was killed in ’89, I guess it was, but, I remember talking to David Hilliard who was Chief of Staff of the Panthers, and I said to him, “Dude, by all accounts, you should have been dead by like 1970. Somebody would have shot you, a cop, or you did some prison time and somebody would have attacked you in prison. The fact that you’re still here is amazing.” I mean, their resilience – these people are survivors and they kept on going. It wasn’t part of my book to go through everyone who died and is still in prison. Just the fact that a good chunk of them came through the other side and continued to do interesting things.

Was having a soundtrack your idea or your publisher’s?

That was my idea. The thing about the soundtrack with the exception of just a couple of songs – I mean there’s a section on Marvin Gaye, Sly Stone, Hendrix, there is a chunk to acknowledge the popular artists, but it does tend to focus on the obscure. People are going to read this book and be like, “Damn, I need to hear some of this shit.” I just wanted a cross sampling. Obviously, there could have been three or four CDs, but I thought here’s one nice compact discs where there’s really a lot of different ideologies on that one disc, including some spoken word and some comedy. A good chunk of what’s on that album I discovered doing my book research.

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

New Poetry Book by Marilyn Buck - Inside/Out - Pre Order Info

Barns and Noble

Overview

Marilyn Buck was a committed political radical, imprisoned for over thirty years for her revolutionary activities. She was also a prolific writer and poet, publishing her work in a prize-winning chapbook, an audio CD, and in various journals and anthologies. She received a PEN American Center prize for poetry in 2001.

Buck was released from prison less than a month before her death at age sixty-two from uterine cancer. This selection of her finest poetry is a living testament to the fierce intelligence and huge compassion that inspired and informed her life, and to the transcendence of her poetic vision.

Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9780872865778
  • Publisher: City Lights Books
  • Publication date: 5/15/2012
  • Pages: 208
  • Sales rank: 488,049

Meet the Author

Marilyn Jean Buck was an American Marxist revolutionary and feminist poet, who was imprisoned for over 30 years for her political activities. She was released on July 15, 2010, less than a month before her death at age 62 from uterine cancer.

While in prison, Buck contributed articles on women in prison, solitary confinement, political prisoners and related issues to Sojourners Magazine, Monthly Review, and other journals and anthologies.

She published her poetry in journals, anthologies, a chapbook, and an audio CD. She received a PEN American Center prize for poetry in 2001. Her poems appeared in the anthologies Hauling Up the Morning, Wall Tappings, Igniting a Revolution: Voices in Defense of the Earth, Seeds of Fire, and in her chapbook, Rescue the Word. Her poems appear on the audio CD Wild Poppies (Freedom Archives 2004).

Her translations and introduction to Cristina Peri Rossi's poetry appeared in State of Exile, Number 58 in the City Lights Pocket Poets Series.

David Meltzer is a poet associated with both the Beat Generation and the San Francisco Renaissance. A pioneer of jazz poetry readings, Meltzer also formed a psychedelic folk-rock group. He continues to perform with the music and poetry review, "Rockpile." He has edited many anthologies, including San Francisco Beat: Talking with the Poets (City Lights, 2001), and has published 11 erotic novels. He is the author of When I Was a Poet, Number 60 in the City Lights Pocket Poets Series. He also taught for many years in the poetics program at New College of California. In 2005, Penguin Books published David's Copy: The Selected Poems of David Meltzer

Sunday, January 22, 2012

SF - Sun 1/29 - New David Gilbert Book Launch - Love and Struggle


Join us for a Book Launch & Celebration of

Love and Struggle: My Life in SDS, the Weather Underground, and Beyond
By David Gilbert

"Gilbert adds heart and bone to the stuff of history." - Mumia Abu Jamal

January 29th, 4-6pm
518 Valencia

this event is free and wheelchair accessible

with readers/panelists:

Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz, historian and author of Outlaw Woman and Red Dirt
Terry Bisson, editor of Love and Struggle
Molly McClure, anti-racist organizer with Catalyst Project
Sanyika Bryant, organizer with Malcolm X
Grassroots Movement and Causa Justa::Just Cause
moderated by Claude Marks, Freedom Archives

About the Book (available now from PM Press and at the event)

A nice Jewish boy from suburban Boston—hell, an Eagle Scout!—David Gilbert arrived at Columbia University just in time for the explosive Sixties. From the early anti-Vietnam War protests to the founding of SDS, from the Columbia Strike to the tragedy of the Townhouse, Gilbert was on the scene: as organizer, theoretician, and above all, activist. He was among the first militants who went underground to build the clandestine resistance to war and racism known as “Weatherman.” And he was among the last to emerge, in captivity, after the disaster of the 1981 Brinks robbery, an attempted expropriation that resulted in four deaths and long prison terms. In this extraordinary memoir, written from the maximum-security prison where he has lived for almost thirty years, David Gilbert tells the intensely personal story of his own Long March from liberal to radical to revolutionary.

Today a beloved and admired mentor to a new generation of activists, he assesses with rare humor, with an understanding stripped of illusions, and with uncommon candor the errors and advances, terrors and triumphs of the Sixties and beyond. It’s a battle that was far from won, but is still not lost: the struggle to build a new world, and the love that drives that effort. A cautionary tale and a how-to as well, Love and Struggle is a book as candid, as uncompromising, and as humane as its author.

Praise:

"Gilbert adds heart and bone to the stuff of history." —Mumia Abu Jamal

"Required reading for anyone interested in the history of radical movements in this country. An honest, vivid portrait of a life spent passionately fighting for justice. In telling his story, Gilbert also reveals the history of left struggles in the 1960s and 70s, and imparts important lessons for today's activists." —Jordan Flaherty, author of Floodlines: Community and Resistance from Katrina to the Jena Six

“David’s is a unique and necessary voice forged in the growing American gulag, the underbelly of the 'land of the free,' offering a focused and unassailable critique as well as a vision of a world that could be but is not yet—a place of peace and love, joy and justice.” —Bill Ayers, author of Fugitive Days and Teaching Toward Freedom

“Like many of his contemporaries, David Gilbert gambled his life on a vision of a more just and generous world. His particular bet cost him the last three decades in prison, and whether or not you agree with his youthful decision, you can be the beneficiary of his years of deep thought, reflection, and analysis on the reality we all share. If there is any benefit to prison, what some refer to as ‘the involuntary monastery,’ it may well look like this book. I urge you to read it.” —Peter Coyote, actor, author of Sleeping Where I Fall

"This book should stimulate learning from our political prisoners, but more importantly it challenges us to work to free them, and in doing so take the best of our history forward." —Susan Rosenberg, author of An American Radical

About the Author:

One of America’s most celebrated political prisoners since his appearance in the Academy Award nominated film, The Weather Underground, David Gilbert is also the author of No Surrender, a book of essays on politics and history. He can be reached at NY’s Auburn Correctional Facility as 83-A-6158.

About Boots Riley (foreword):

A popular leader in the progressive struggle for radical change through culture, Boots Riley is best known as the leader of The Coup, the seminal hip-hop group from Oakland, CA. Billboard Magazine declared the group "the best hip-hop act of the past decade." Riley recently teamed with Tom Morello (of Rage Against the Machine) to form the revolutionary new group, Street Sweeper Social Club.

Product Details:

Author: David Gilbert
Foreword by Boots Riley
Publisher: PM Press
ISBN: 978-1-60486-319-2
Published: January 2012
Format: Paperback
Size: 9 by 6
Page count: 352 Pages
Subjects: Autobiography, Politics-Activism

Tuesday, January 03, 2012

David Gibert's Love and Struggle

January 02, 2012 Counterpunch

A Brother With A Furious Mind

by RON JACOBS

In 1981, a group of revolutionaries robbed a Brink’s armored truck near Nyack, NY. In the ensuing confusion and attempt to flee, three people died from gunfire. A couple days later, one of the revolutionaries was killed by law enforcement. The robbery itself was planned and carried out by members of the Black Liberation Army: a group of former Black Panthers who had chosen armed struggle, and the May 19 Communist organization, which was founded by white revolutionaries also dedicated to armed struggle. One of those members was former Weather Underground member David Gilbert. Gilbert is currently serving a sentence of 75 years to life in the New York State prison system. Other May 19th members arrested in relation to the robbery have been paroled or pardoned.

This month PM Press, the Oakland, CA. publisher founded by AK Press founder Ramsey Kanaan and others, is publishing Gilbert’s memoirs. The book, titled Love and Struggle: My Life in SDS, the Weather Underground, and Beyond, is certain to be included in the top tier of books having to do with the period of US history known as the Sixties. There is no self-pity within these pages , but lots of self-reflection. In what can only be considered a refreshing approach, Gilbert takes full responsibility for the path he has chosen and explains that path in an intelligently political manner and with a decidedly leftist understanding. Love and Struggle combines objective history, personal memory, and a critical perspective into a narrative that is at once an adventuresome tale and a political guide through the past fifty years.

Gilbert begins his story by describing his youth and his developing awareness that the United States was not what he had been led to believe it was. An Eagle Scout who believed the myths inherent in American exceptionalism, he was unprepared for the cognitive dissonance he underwent while watching the attacks by law enforcement on civil rights marchers in the US South. That sense of conflict deepened when he headed off to Columbia University. By 1965, angered by the US war on the Vietnamese and armed with a well-researched understanding of why the US was really involved there, Gilbert was organizing Columbia students to join antiwar protests. Like many of his contemporaries, by 1968 he was an anti-imperialist and working full-time against the war in Vietnam and racism in the United States. By 1969, he was one of the original members of Weatherman and by April 1970 he was underground.

Gilbert tells his story with a hard-learned humility. Occasionally interjecting his personal life–his loves and failures, his relationship with his family–with his political journey, it is the politics which are foremost in this memoir. A true

revolutionary, every other aspect of Gilbert’s life is subsumed to the revolution. This kind of life is not an easy one. Indeed, it arguably makes the life of an ascetic monk look easy by comparison. After all, the monk is only trying to change himself, while the committed revolutionary wants to change the world into one where justice prevails; a world that by its very structure resists such change.

Love and Struggle carefully examines the history of the periods Gilbert has lived in. From the early days of the antiwar movement and the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) to the public street-fighting arrogance of early Weatherman; from Weatherman’s transition to the Weather Underground Organization (WUO) and its growing isolation from the New Left it was a part of; and from the post-Vietnam war US left to the Brink robbery and its aftermath, Gilbert keeps the politics front and center in his text. In his discussion of the period between Weather’s publication of its essential work Prairie Fire and its immediate aftermath, Gilbert provides an insight into the debates inside WUO and among its supporters in the years after the peace treaty was signed with northern Vietnam. His portrayal of the differences around theory being debated in the WUO serve as a broader description of the debates raging throughout the new left as the US intervention in Vietnam’s anti-colonial struggle neared its end. For those of us who were politically involved at the time, the debates ring with familiarity: national liberation over class; the interaction between race and class in the US; the oppression of women and white male privilege. In a testimony to his writing abilities, Gilbert’s discussion of the issues makes them as alive in this book as those arguments actually were in the mid- 1970s. His keen political sense reveals the interplay between different political perspectives, understandings of history, and the always present contests of ego. The political arguments outlined by Gilbert (especially when describing the battle inside WUO) are still relevant today. Their echoes are present in the General Assemblies of the Occupy Wall Street movement and in forums more specific and less specific across the nation. Gilbert’s presentation of the essential WUO arguments that challenges the overriding role of class in the nature of oppression is not only reasoned and impassioned, it is worth studying and makes points useful to the future of anti-imperialist struggle in the United States Furthermore, the book includes an ongoing and excellent discussion of the nature of white supremacy and white skin privilege. For anyone who has spent time involved in the Occupy movement the past few months, the relevance of this latter discussion is all too familiar.

For those looking for a sensationalist account of life as a revolutionary or a confession, they should look elsewhere. David Gilbert’s memoir is a political account of a political life. Every action undertaken, every decision made is examined via the eye of a leftist revolutionary. This does not mean there are no page-turning moments in the book, however. Indeed, the sections describing Weather’s move underground and Gilbert’s daily life off the grid are interesting and revealing, as are those describing the attempts by WUO members to evade capture. The descriptions of Gilbert’s clandestine life and his subsequent moving back aboveground and then back under are also riveting.

Underlying the entire narrative is a current of what is best described as self-criticism; of Weather, the New Left, armed struggle and, ultimately, of Gilbert himself. As anyone who has experienced something akin to a self-criticism session can attest, such sessions can be emotionally wrenching episodes of retribution and petty anger. They can also be tremendously useful when conducted humanely. Gilbert’s written attempts at this exercise in Love and Struggle lean toward the latter expression while also proviing interesting and useful considerations to the aforementioned issues (along with issues related to those criticisms). Gilbert’s realization that his ego occasionally caused him to make decisions that weren’t based on politically sound rationales is something any radical leader should take into account. In fact, Gilbert’s continuing struggle with his ego and it’s place in the decisions he made while free reminded me of a maxim relayed to me a couple times in my life; once by an organizer for the Revolutionary Union in Maryland and once by a friend from the Hog Farm commune. That maxim is simply: if you start believing that the revolution can’t exist without you, then it’s time to leave center stage and go back to doing grunt work where nobody knows (or cares) who you are. In other words, you are not the revolution so take your ego out of it

In the well-considered catalog of books dealing honestly with the period of history known as the Sixties in the United States, Love and Struggle is an important addition. Borrowing his technique from memoir, confession, and objective history-telling, David Gilbert has provided the reader of history with the tale of a person and a time. Simultaneously, he has given the reader inclined to political activism a useful, interesting, and well-told example of one human’s revolutionary commitment to social change no matter what the cost.

Ron Jacobs is the author of The Way the Wind Blew: a History of the Weather Underground and Short Order Frame Up. Jacobs’ essay on Big Bill Broonzy is featured in CounterPunch’s collection on music, art and sex, Serpents in the Garden. His collection of essays and other musings titled Tripping Through the American Night is now available and his new novel is The Co-Conspirator’s Tale. He is a contributor to Hopeless: Barack Obama and the Politics of Illusion, forthcoming from AK Press. He can be reached at: ronj1955@gmail.com.

Tuesday, May 03, 2011

Conversations with Author Diana Block May 5th and 6th

Thursday May 5th and Friday May 6th

Conversations with Diana Block, author of Arm the Spirit: A Woman's Journey
Underground and Back

Friends and suporters,

Join HRC and the Pittsburgh Organizing Group in proudly sponsoring two events with
author Diana Block this week.

Thursday, May 5th: University of Pittsburgh, David Lawrence Hall Room 120, 1-3 PM

Friday, May 6th: The Union Project, 801 North Negley Avenue, 7-9 PM
Diana will read selections from her book, discuss her years in Pittsburgh and her
recent work with women prisoners and hold a Q & A session.

Forward this email and help spread the word.

Diana Block and her family lived and worked underground in Pittsburgh. In June of
1985, Diana and her two-week old son and five companions-all of them active in the
struggle for independence-fled L.A. after finding a surveillance device in their
car.

Her recent memoir explores this history and brings a feminist perspective to a
subject typically dominated by heroic, male discourse and offers unique insights
into the radical politics and culture of the 1970s.

Diana will read selections from her book, discuss her years in Pittsburgh and her
recent work with women prisoners.

Check out Diana's book from AK Press: Arm the Spirit: A Woman's Jounrey Underground
and Back

Copies will be available to buy at the events.

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Book Launch for Our Only Weapon Our Spirit

Thursday, May 5 · 7:00pm - 9:30pm

Location
The Commons, Brooklyn
388 Atlantic Avenue

Please join us to commemorate the life of Bobby Sands and to celebrate the release
of a new selection of his prison writing: Our Only Weapon Our Spirit. May 5th, 2011
marks the thirtieth year since Sands was legally killed by British intransigence. To
remember his sacrifice and honor his struggle, we are releasing this new edition of
his prison writing.

Our Only Weapon ...Our Spirit
Selected Prison Writings of
Bobby Sands

edited by Samuel Conway and Patrick Stanley

From the Back Cover:

After sixty-six days on hunger strike, Bobby Sands was legally killed by British
intransigence. He died resisting the claim that eight-hundred years of Irish rebel
history had been purely illegitimate and criminal. He had been a volunteer of the
Irish Republican Army, an Irish speaker, elected Member of Parliament and writer.
Thirty years later, his legacy as a cultural figure, freedom fighter and writer
continues to resonate with people struggling for freedom throughout the world.

This new selection of his prison writing commemorates his life and his legacy. We
hope this book contributes to his vision of a just, united and free Ireland, and
helps to sustain the liberation struggles of people world-wide.

All proceeds from the sale of this book go to the benefit of the wives, families and
dependents of prisoners through the Bobby Sands Trust.

What happens when you uncover FBI infiltration?

BOOK READING AND LIVE DIALOGUE

with Dominque Stevenson & Eddie Conway
Friday, April 15, 12:30 p.m.
@Southern California Library
6120 S. Vermont Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90044

A truly amazing, authentic African American history lesson.
—Emory Douglas, Artist and former Minister of Culture, Black Panther Party

"Eddie Conway articulates past and present oppression and demonstrates the need
for continuing resistance. Read him."
—Bobby Seale, Founding Chairman of the Black Panther Party


Marshall "Eddie" Conway is a former member of the Baltimore chapter of the Black
Panther Party. In 1969, he uncovered evidence of FBI actions against the Black
Panther Party as part of the COINTELPRO initiative, and found himself locked away
one year later, convicted of a murder he did not commit. Read more....
Dominque Demetrea Stevenson is the co-author of Marshall Law: The Life and Times of
a Baltimore Black Panther, and the director of the American Friends Service
Committee's Maryland Peace with Justice Program. Read more....

Copies of Marshall Law: The Life & Times of a Baltimore Black Panther
will be available at the event.
Download a flyer (PDF)
For more info: www.socallib.org • facebook.com/socallib (323) 759-6063

The Library is located at 6120 S. Vermont Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90044 (off the 110
Freeway, exit Slauson or Gage).We're accessible by MTA Bus 204 and Express Bus 754.
Street parking is available. Mapquest map and directions to the Library.

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Professor Michelle Alexander and the New Jim Crow

American Social Justice Tour
Will Stop In Chicago, Illinois
Thursday, March 17, 2011

If you are not supporting her work to keep innocent Black and Latino men out of
prison,
"you are a criminal!"

A Thursday Afternoon with
MICHELLE ALEXANDER
Author of "The New Jim Crow - Mass Incarceration In The Age of Color Blindness"

Thursday, March 17, 2011
4:30 PM
Roosevelt University
430 South Michigan
Chicago, Illinois
This event is FREE!
You Must RSVP: Click Here

Review by Mumia Abu-Jamal


The book, The New Jim Crow, offers an unflinching look at the US addiction to
imprisonment, and comes up with a startling diagnosis; American corporate greed,
political opportunism and the exploitation of age old hatred and fears have
congealed to create a monstrous explosion in the world's largest prison industrial
complex. Further, the author, a law professor at Ohio State University's Moritz
College of Law, Michelle Alexander, digs deep into US history, and deeper still into
US criminal law and practice to conclude that the barbarous system of repression and
control known commonly as Jim Crow, had a rebirth in this era. That's why she calls
it: The New Jim Crow.

This system of legal discrimination came into being much as the first one did. After
the rout of the South by the Civil War, millions of newly freed Africans exercised
these new rights under Reconstruction. Black men became senators and legislators
across the South. But this period was short lived, and as soon as possible, states
passed harsh laws known as Black Codes, which denied rights and criminalized
behavior by Blacks, and exposed them to the repression of southern prisons, where
convicts were leased out to labor for others; it was the rebirth of slavery by other
means.

This present era began at the height of the US Civil Rights Movement, when millions
of Blacks fought for their rights denied for more than a century. Alexander
concludes that this new system, this new coalescence of economic and political
interests, targeted Blacks, especially those engaged in the drug industry, as the
human capital with which to provide massive construction, huge prison staffs, and
the other appendages of the apparatus of state repression.

But perhaps Alexander's most salient point is her finding that America's Black
population constitutes a 'racial caste' that feeds and perpetuates mass
incarceration [195]
Indeed, every other societal structure supports this superstructure, from broken
schools, to de-industrialization, to population concentration in isolated urban
ghettoes, to the violence of police, and the silence of the Black Middle class.

One might argue that such a claim seems unsustainable when we see a Black president,
hundreds of black political figures and those in entertainment and sports. But
Alexander explains that every system allows exceptions, for they serve to legitimize
the system and mask its ugliness and its gross effects upon the majority of Blacks.

For example, while it's well-known that apartheid was an overtly racist system, it
allowed Asian and even African American diplomats to live and work in such a regime,
by the political expediency of identifying them as "honorary whites" in their
official papers. When comparing both systems, Alexander argues that the US
imprisons more Blacks both in raw number and per capita than South Africa at the
height of apartheid!

The New Jim Crow - indeed!
_____________________________________________________________________________

Mumia Abu-Jamal (born Wesley Cook on April 24, 1954) is an American who was found
guilty of and sentenced to death for the December 9, 1981 murder of Philadelphia
police officer Daniel Faulkner. He has been described as "perhaps the best known
Death-Row prisoner in the world", and his sentence is one of the most debated today.
Before his arrest, he was an activist, radio journalist, and part-time cab driver.
He was a member of the Black Panther Party until October 1970.

Friday, January 21, 2011

An American Radical Political Prisoner in My Own Country by Susan Rosenberg


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT:
Vida Engstrand, Ph: (212) 407-1573
Email: vengstrand@kensingtonbooks.com

SUSAN ROSENBERG’S 16 YEARS AS A POLITICAL PRISONER COME TO LIGHT IN NEW MEMOIR
- AN AMERICAN RADICAL: Political Prisoner in My Own Country to be published March 1,
2011
Early Praise for AN AMERICAN RADICAL:
“Articulate and clear-eyed, Rosenberg’s memoir memorably records the struggles of a
woman determined to be the agent of her own life.”
– Kirkus Review
“Rosenberg takes us on an astonishing journey--from a tiny underground revolutionary
cell into the vast underground of the American penal system...an impassioned
memoir.”
– Bell Gale Chevigny, editor of Doing Time
“Deeply moving, lyrically written...Everyone who cares about justice and our future
will want to read and share this heartening book.”
– Blanche Wiesen Cook, author of Eleanor Roosevelt
“Compelling...will rouse readers to forge ahead with their own commitments to
genuine patriotism through opposition to oppression.”
– Don Hazen, Executive Editor, AlterNet.org
“Gripping...a harrowing story that is painfully personal and an important part of
American history.”
– Christian Parenti, author of Lockdown America

***
In 1982, long-time radical activist Susan Rosenberg was placed on the FBI’s
most-wanted list with orders of “shoot to kill.” In 1984, she and Timothy Blunk were
unloading a U-Haul filled with 740 pounds of explosives at a storage facility in
Cherry Hill, New Jersey, when the FBI arrived. Rosenberg was sentenced to 58 years
in federal prison and spent the next 16 horrific years in some of the worst maximum
security woman’s prisons in the country.
Rosenberg served time in six different federal institutions and endured the first
ten years in varying degrees of seclusion, including stints in the first
experimental high security unit (HSU) for women and in the first maximum-security
prison for women in the United States. At HSU she was regularly stripsearched,
heavily chained, and subjected to intense psychological torture such as complete
isolation, sleep deprivation, twenty-four hour lighting, and constant surveillance.
Susan and others in conjunction with the ACLU prison project, and the support of
Amnesty International fought and won the closing of this experiment. Rosenberg went
on to other prisons, later working in general population as an HIV peer educator and
teacher until she was granted executive clemency by President Bill Clinton, in
January
2001.
Candid and eloquent, Susan Rosenberg’s powerful memoir is a profound indictment of
the U.S. prison system, as she recounts her journey from the impassioned idealism of
the 1960s to life as a political prisoner in her own country–and reflects America’s
turbulent coming-of-age over the past half century.
SUSAN ROSENBERG has been a speaker, educator, and lecturer to those concerned with
the issues of women in prison, political prisoners, prison reform, and social
justice activism. Since 2004, Rosenberg, has served as the director of
communications at a faith-based human-rights organization working to alleviate
poverty, hunger, and disease in the developing world. Rosenberg received a BA in
American history from the City University of New York and an MA in writing from
Antioch University. She lives in New York City.
Please visit www.AnAmericanRadical.com for more information.
AN AMERICAN RADICAL: Political Prisoner in My Own Country
By Susan Rosenberg
March 2011 / Memoir / Trade Paperback Original /$14.95 / 978-0-8065-3304-9
Author Residence: New York, NY
www.AnAmericanRadical.com