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Want to Start a Revolution?: Radical Women in the Black Freedom Struggle

ePub Want to Start a Revolution?: Radical Women in the Black Freedom Struggle by Jeanne Theoharis; Komozi Woodard in History

Description

This volume grew out of a series of lectures by the author in 1944. He analyzes the centrality of Zion to biblical and Talmudic thought; how it inspired medieval thinkers and mystics; and how it moved modern Jews from Moses Hess to Ray Kook and A.D. Gordon.


#760304 in Books NYU Press 2009-12-01 2009-12-01Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 9.00 x .91 x 6.00l; .93 #File Name: 0814783147370 pages


Review
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful. revolution startedBy Michael WestWANT TO START A REVOLUTION? is a major intervention in the literature on the black freedom struggle in the United States. It aims at nothing less than a re-envisioning of African American radicalism; which it does by placing women at the core of the struggle in the 20th century. The volume reveals women at work across time and space and in numerous movements and settings. It shows; too; incredible political transgression--that is; the ease and abandon with which women in struggle moved across organizational; ideological and other boundaries that were supposed to be fixed and impenetrable.In this volume; such transgressions are encountered from beginning to end. Consider Esther Cooper Jackson; the subject of the first chapter. Middle-class in background; she encountered the communist movement as a graduate student at Fisk University before ending up at Freedomways magazine; from which podium she powerfully mediated the inter-connections and inter-locutions between multiple traditions in the black freedom struggle. Consider; too; Johnnie Tillmon; whose story is told in the last chapter of the volume. Descended from sharecroppers; her political career demonstrated the suppleness and power of Black Power; which previously took a drubbing from scholars for allegedly mashing up the Civil Rights movement. WANT TO START A REVOLUTION; along with a number of other recent works; definitively refutes and corrects such fallacies; and indeed shows that there were no inseparable lines between Civil Rights and Black Power. This verity is well exemplified in the life and labor of Johnnie Tillmon; in whose hands Black Power became an ideology for defending poor single mothers and welfare recipients like herself. Organizationally; the result was the militant National Welfare Rights Organization.Between Cooper and Tillmon; WANT TO START A REVOLUTION presents a cast of equally fascinating activists (Vicki Garvin; Shirley Graham Du Bois; Rosa Parks; Assata Shakur; Flo Kennedy; Shirley Chisholm; Denise Oliver and Yuri Kochiyama; among them) and movements (the Panthers' Oakland Community School; the Young Lords; and Atlanta's Black Arts scene; among them). Vicki Garvin probably summed it up best. "While I was a pan-Africanist; I was a proletarian; working class; internationalist;" she is quoted as saying in the chapter on her. She failed to add that she was also a feminist; but perhaps that went without saying.Like the women and movements it chronicles; WANT TO START A REVOLUTION is a book for all seasons. Academic specialists will find it novel and refreshing both because of the new information it contains and its bold paradigmatic challenges. The volume is also accessible and engaging; which makes it an excellent undergraduate text. Last; but certainly not least; WANT TO START A REVOLUTION will inspire and excite activists; providing them something of a handbook from which many lesson may be learned and many techniques gleaned.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Five StarsBy John GardnerGreat Product0 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Great!!By JD KirklandI needed this book for a class and I was really excited to see that it arrived very soon. When I ordered it I thought I'd have to wait a couple weeks; but a few days and the book was on my front porch. I was very grateful. ^__^-J.D. Kirkland

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