with graphics | Radical History |
Including
Progress, Exploitation
and Repression, Liberation Struggles
(including workers', women's,
anti-fascist, African-American,
Hispanic, third
world, 60's, and ecology struggles), and Ecofeminist
History |
Learn from history. But don't let
yourself be limited or constrained by history. Help build the future you
want.
Progress
The Ascent of Man,
by Jacob Bronowski. Reviewed by Amazon.com.
Connections, by James Burke.
Reviewed by Amazon.com.
Connections
2: 5 pack
(video series), starring James Burke, directed by Mike Lee. While these
videos are probably too expensive to purchase, you can probably rent them from a
library or video store. Also
reviewed by Reel.com.
Connections
3: 5 pack
(video series), starring James Burke, directed by Mike Lee. While these
videos are probably too expensive to purchase, you can probably rent them from a
library or video store. Reviewed by Amazon.com.
Buy used
from Powell's
Books or another
source.
The
Millennium Whole Earth Catalog: Access to Tools and Ideas for the Twenty-First Century.
Stewart Brand compares
The
Millennium Whole Earth Catalog
to the 35-volume Encyclopédie
(1751-1776) of Denis Diderot and states that "Diderot's Encyclopédie was
the leading tool of the Enlightenment." He also uses the term
"empowerment" in his article. Reviewed by Amazon.com.
People's
Century: The Ordinary Men and Women Who Made the Twenthieth Century,
by Godfrey Hodgson and P. Smith. The companion volume to the 26-part PBS
documentary. Note: Amazon.com
sells almost all of these PBS documentary videos at a discount. Reviewed by
Amazon.com.
The Cartoon History of the United States, by Larry Gonick. Reviewed by
Amazon.com.
Flashbacks:
Twenty-Five Years of Doonesbury, by Garry Trudeau. Doonesbury's comic
book version of American history from 1968-1995. Reviewed by Amazon.com.
The
Fourth Turning: An American Prophecy, by William Strauss and Neil Howe.
Also available in audio
cassette format. They also offer a detailed
website on their book. Reviewed by Amazon.com.
Fast Forward: Life Inside Our Ever-Shrinking World. Reviewed by
Amazon.com. Also
reviewed
by PBS.
The
Biotech Century: Harnessing the Gene and Remaking the World, by Jeremy Rifkin. Reviewed by
Amazon.com
The
Age of Access: The New Culture Where of Hypercapitalism Where All of Life Is a
Paid-For Experience, by Jeremy Rifkin. Reviewed by
Amazon.com
Exploitation and Repression
Exploitation is usually self-evident to the
exploited. I believe the exploiters and those who benefit from
exploitation often prefer to remain blissfully unaware of the exploitation.
500 years is a ballad explaining
the last 500 years of conquest and how we need to shift from being conquerors to
sustainers.
Third
World Atlas, by Alan Thomas, Ben Crow, etc. The first edition of this book, published in 1983, includes a concise
22-page historical atlas of European colonialism and its effect on the third world.
(I assume that the 1994 second edition contains at least as much info as the first
edition.)
Another major problem in the 20th century has been
warfare. I learned before 1986 that in the 20th century over 75 million
people had been killed in over 207 wars. As far I can tell, WWI was
totally pointless. WWII, while very costly, defeated fascism.
The
Slave Trade: The Story of the Atlantic Slave Trade 1440-1870, by Hugh
Thomas. A thorough 760-page history of the deplorable yet profitable 430-year slave
trade. Reviewed by Amazon.com.
Africans in America,
starring Angela Bassett. Produced in 1998. A detailed 6-hour
documentary on slavery's origin and history in America. Reviewed by Amazon.com.
Roots,
starring LeVar Burton and Ed Asner, directed by David Greene and Marvin J.
Chomsky.
Produced and widely viewed on TV in 1977. A personal story of how one
man's African American ancestors coped with slavery before it abolished after
the American Civil War. Reviewed by Amazon.com. Also
reviewed by Reel.com.
Roots,
by Alex Haley. The book that the 1977 made-for-TV movie series is based
on. Reviewed by Amazon.com.
Red Flag: Communism In Russia. While the Russian
Communist revolution in 1917 started out on an optimistic note and sparked a
lot of idealism, Lenin developed a centralized control structure that was taken over by Joseph
Stalin, who repressed both dissidents and imagined dissidents and sent an
estimated 7 million people to prison camps in the second half of the
1930's. Russian Communism
was eventually overthrown and the Soviet Union
broke up into newly independent countries. However, the reformers have
yet to build an economically viable Russian government or even an economically
viable fully functioning free market economy. The level of greed and
corruption in the Russian economy today probably exceeds that of the American
robber baron era over 100 years ago. I wish them luck.
Reviewed by Amazon.com. Also
reviewed
by PBS.
The
Rise and Fall of the Third Reich: A History of Nazi Germany, by William
Blum. The rise to power of Hitler and the Nazis (and the Gestapo and the
SS), the death and destruction of World War II, and the Holocaust
were clearly one of the greatest evils in the 20th century. After the
Nazis started World War II, it took a 6
year World War from 1939-1945 to defeat the Nazis and their allies. I
don't recommend investing the time required to read the entire book, but it does
provide an authoritative account of the rise and fall of the worst dictatorship
of the 20th century. Reviewed by Amazon.com.
The Black Book of Communism: Crimes, Terror, Repression, by
by Stephane Courtois, Mark Kramer
(translator), Jonathan Murphy, (translator), Jean-Louis Panne, Andrzej
Paczkowski, Karel Bartosek,
and Jean-Louis Margolin. This book carefully documents the
deaths caused by Communist dictatorships throughout the 20th century and
estimates that the total number of victims of Communism was between 85-100
million people. Reviewed by Amazon.com.
Out of print.
Juntas
United, by Peter Chippindale and Ed Harriman. Published in
1978. Out of print. In 1978, not that long ago, military
dictatorships ran many countries in the southern hemisphere. This
bluntly-illustrated book documents the appalling greed of and exploitation and
repression by many military dictatorships back in 1978.
Killing
Hope: U.S. Military and CIA Interventions Since World War II, by William
Blum. During the Cold War, the U.S. military and the CIA fought and
smashed a number of national liberation movements in the name of anti-communism.
However, before the Cold War, the
U.S. military valiantly fought a costly but necessary anti-fascist war, WWII, and after
the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 and a new Democratic President in America
U.S. military intervention appears to be shifting towards humanitarian
interventions, such as the U.S. invasion of Haiti and the peacekeeping mission
in Bosnia. Reviewed by Amazon.com.
Missing, starring Jack Lemmon and Sissy Spacek, directed by Constantin
Costa-Gavras.
If you're wondering why people want to put Pinochet on trial for crimes against
humanity, this video will fill you in. In
1973, after a prolonged political conflict, General Pinochet militarily
overthrow the democratically elected government of Chili with aid of ITT and the
CIA. According to Juntas United, "Pinochet's army invaded
Santiago, the capital, bombed the presidential palace and began systematically
torturing and exterminating the people who worked for Salvador Allende's elected
government." Juntas United estimates that 10% of the
population fled the country within 5 years.
Reviewed by Amazon.com.
Romero,
starring: Raul Julia, et al., directed by John Duigan. The
U.S. government led by then-President Ronald Reagan spent at least 4 billion
dollars funding the death-squad government of El Salvador in the 1980s.
This story documents the repression, Salvadorean Roman Catholic Archbishop
Romero's brave humane attempt to stop the escalating military violence, and his
assassination by a right-wing death squad while he was preaching a sermon in church
. I have heard an estimate that at least 20% of the Salvadorean
people fled to the U.S. in response to military repression and El Salvador's civil
war. (As a side note, when
500 people (including myself) were arrested and jailed in a massive nonviolent
civil disobedience in front of the White House on the tenth anniversary of
Archbishop Romero's assassination, the mainstream media ignored it. As we
watched the TV news from our jail cell, we didn't see our protest recorded in
the news. I do recall their lead story- that Redskin Dexter Manley had
been busted for coke. My complaint to the Washington Post Ombudsman
Richard Harwood got the response "demonstrations are passé."
The police, on the other hand, deployed in force, seemed to think it was a large
protest, and I heard some of them reminisce about the large anti-war May Day
protest back in the early 70's.)
Reviewed by Amazon.com
Publisher out of stock in Dec. 2000.
J. Edgar Hoover: The Man and the Secrets, by William
Blum. Published in 1991. An exhaustive 846-page expose of the man
who embodied corrupt repressive state power in America in the 20th
century. Hoover was involved in the post-WWI Palmer Raids, McCarthyism,
and Cointelpro, led the FBI for decades, and managed to blackmail/intimidate
politicians for years. Reviewed by Amazon.com.
Out of print.
The Secret File on J. Edgar Hoover, by PBS Home Video. Published in
1993. Already out of print. In
defense of Hoover and the U.S. human rights record, let me note that Hoover
caused far less damage than Hitler or Stalin.
Free
online version.
Free
online version.
Cointelpro Papers: Documents from the
FBI's Secret Wars Against Domestic Dissent, by Ward
Churchill and Jim Vanderwall. While the FBI went way overboard in the
60's, I would like to believe that they have since cleaned up their act.
If understanding the government's repression and dirty tricks used against the
60's movement may help you stay alert to possible dirty tricks and police
repression used today, this book may be useful for protesters. Until
recently, the
last large-scale Cointelpro-type activity that I was aware of was the FBI
infiltration of CISPES (Committee in Solidarity with the People of the El
Salvador) and FBI hassling of political activists who traveled to Central
America in the 80's. Based on the police response to the major 2000
protests, I believe it would be prudent to assume police monitoring of and
probably at least some police infiltration of at least militant protest
groups. I believe police were particularly interested in monitoring and
limiting/repressing large street protests and in preventing any violent
protests. Police misconduct in 2000 included improper mass arrests/street
sweeps in DC and Philadelphia, a largely failed attempt to fully prosecute
protesters in Philadelphia, including an initial one million dollar bail for one
activist, alleged police brutality in Philadelphia jails, and excessive
force/violence on the part of the LAPD. However, unlike the Cointelpro
era, the level of police repression appears to have not reached the extremes of occasionally
framing or killing protesters.
Reviewed by Amazon.com.
While
I have added some shocking books on exploitation and repression, including
Nazi and Communist atrocities, there are still at least 3 very legitimate historical
gripes that I do not yet sell books on: the Native Americans losing their land and dealing with European diseases and
European conquest, the Inquisition, and the Irish Potato Famine. Sadly, Rwanda, Bosnia, the Congo,
Kosovo, East Timor, Sudan, Chechnya, and other warfare zones are evidence
that war and genocide still continue in these modern times.
While war, oppression, poverty, hunger, and/or famine continue to
plague different areas and different people in the world, people are also trying to heal
the wounds of past misfortune and past injustice. In 1997, Clinton considered making
an apology for slavery and England apologized to Ireland for England's harmful role in the
Irish Potato Famine. Canada recently financially compensated some of its Native
American population for past injustices. In 1998, Northern Ireland appears to
have ended (or at least dramatically toned down) decades of sectarian warfare.
As of Dec. 1999, Clinton has apologized for past U.S. intervention in both
Guatemala and Greece. And
Arab-Israeli peace efforts continue in the Middle East.
Today, we are creating what will become the history of the
future. Hopefully we will act as humanely and wisely as possible and create a good
future.
[Note: It is possible that posting this quote on the Internet had an immediate
impact. The day after I posted it, 3 historically notable agreements were
announced. Here are some of the details. First, I posted the latest revised
version of the preceding note on the Internet on Thursday, Nov. 12, 1998. On
Friday, Nov. 13, 1998, some possibly related articles appeared on the front page and the
editorial page of The Washington Post. On Saturday, Nov. 14, 1998, The
Washington Post reported on their front page that 1) "Clinton, Jones Reach
Settlement- President to Pay $850,000 to End Harassment Suit, Without Admission or
Apology", 2) "Big Tobacco, State Officials Reach $206 Billion Deal- Pact Needs
Approval of Dozens of States" (in order to "end a massive legal assault" in
order to "achieve historic public health gains" and offer "the single
largest economic recovery in history"), and 3) "U.S., IMF Announce Plan to Avert
Brazilian Crisis- Loan Package Totals 41.5 Billion". To quote from a letter to
the editor published in The Washington Post on Nov. 14, 1998, "struggles for
peace and justice tend to transcend their authors and inventors."]
Publisher out of stock in Dec. 2000.
20 Years
of Censored News, by Carl Jensen. The top censored or underreported news
stories from 1976-1995. From Project
Censored. Reviewed by Amazon.com.
Liberation Struggles
A People's History of the United States: The Wall
Charts, by Howard Zinn and George Kirschner. A radical history of America that is short,
concise, and to the point, focusing on the lives, struggles, and political
struggles of the ordinary people
throughout America's history. Includes 2 large 3' by 4 1/2' posters and a 48-page
oversized booklet. Reviewed by Amazon.com.
A
People's History of the United States, by Howard Zinn. This book
covers American history from 1492 to the present from the point of view of the
often-exploited common people. Reviewed by Amazon.com.
A
People's History of the United States- Teaching Edition, by Howard
Zinn. In 1997, Howard Zinn converted his radical American history classic (with over
450,000 copies sold) into a textbook. This book covers American history from 1492 to
the present from the point of view of the often-exploited common people. Reviewed by
Amazon.com.
Buy
from Buy.com.
Liberty! The American Revolution. A
6-hour PBS documentary on the American
Revolution. You can also buy it from buy.com. Reviewed by Amazon.com. Also
reviewed by Reel.com.
Liberty!: The American Revolution,
by Thomas Fleming. Reviewed by Amazon.com.
Currently out of
print.
The
Power of the People: Active Nonviolence in the United States, edited by
Robert Cooney and Helen Michalowski. Published by New Society Publishers
Baby Boomers: Box Set. A set of 5 PBS People's Century
documentary videos selected for the baby boomer generation. Includes Boomtime,
Skin Deep,
Picture
Power, Young
Blood, and Half
the People. Reviewed by Amazon.com.
Workers and Union Struggles
Working
Stiffs, Union Maids, Reds, and Riffraff: An Organized Guide to Films About Labor,
by Tom Zaniello. Reviewed by Amazon.com.
Labor's
Untold Story, by Richard O. Boyer and Herbert M. Morais. Published
in 1955 by the United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America. Reviewed by
Amazon.com.
Strike!
(South End Press Classics, V. 1), by Jeremy Brecher. This new 25th
anniversary edition covers the major strikes and revolts in America from the Great
Upheaval in 1877 through the 1990's. Reviewed by Amazon.com.
I also sell a documentary movie
and book on Cesar Chavez and United Farm Workers Union.
- See also political music and political
songbooks. -
Anti-Fascist Struggles- WWII
The
Good Fight, starring Mary Dore and Sam Sills, directed by Noel Buckner.
Documents the fight of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade- 3,200 Americans who
volunteered to fight fascism in Spain in the late 1930's before the fascists
started WWII. By the way,
George Orwell and Ernest Hemingway both volunteered to fight fascism in Spain. Reviewed by
Amazon.com. Also
reviewed by Reel.com.
The
Good War: An Oral History of World War Two, by Studs Terkel.
Reviewed by Amazon.com.
Feminism and Women's Struggles
The Story of Elizabeth Cady Stanton & Susan B. Anthony: Not for Ourselves Alone (1999)
(video), directed by Ken Burns. Reviewed by Amazon.com.
The Story of Elizabeth Cady Stanton & Susan B. Anthony: Not for Ourselves Alone (1999),
by Geoffrey C. Ward, etc. Reviewed by Amazon.com.
Half The People: Women Unite And Fight For Equality. Reviewed by
Amazon.com. Reviewed
by PBS.
The National Women's History Project offers the
Women's History Catalog.
See also the ecofeminist history section.
Civil Rights and
African American Struggles
Skin Deep: The Fight Against Legislated Racism. Reviewed by
Amazon.com. Reviewed
by PBS.
Eyes on the
Prize Box Set (video box set). A top-quality (but expensive)
14-hour PBS documentary of African-American freedom struggles in the civil rights
movement from the 50's through the mid-80's. You can probably borrow or rent the
videos from a library or video store. Reviewed by Amazon.com. Also
reviewed by Reel.com.
Eyes on
the Prize: America's Civil Rights Years, 1954-1965, by Juan Williams.
The companion edition to the PBS documentary film, Eyes on the
Prize. Reviewed by Amazon.com.
The Autobiography of Martin Luther King, Jr., edited
by Clayborne Carson. Based upon the life and the extensive lifetime
writing of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr..
Published in Jan. 2001. Reviewed by Amazon.com
The
Speeches of
Martin Luther King, Powerful speeches by Dr. Martin Luther King,
Jr.. Reviewed by Amazon.com.
Out of print.
King, starring Paul Winfield and Cicely Tyson, directed by
Abby Mann. A made-for-TV movie documenting the life and untimely death of Dr.
Martin Luther King, Jr.. Currently out of print, but you can probably rent a copy
from a video store or library.
Malcolm X, starring Denzel Washington and Angela Bassett, directed
by Spike Lee. Reviewed by Amazon.com. Also
reviewed by Reel.com.
Parting the
Waters: America in the King Years, 1954-63, by Taylor Branch.
Also available in audio
cassette format. Reviewed
by Amazon.com.
- See also political
songbooks. -
Civil Rights and Hispanic
Struggles
Viva
La Causa, 500 Years of Chicano History (version in English) (video),
directed by Elizabeth Martinez and Doug Norberg. Reviewed by Amazon.com.
500
Anos Del Pueblo Chicano/500 Years of Chicano History: in Pictures,
edited by Elizabeth Martinez. Published by the Southwest
Organizing Project. Reviewed by Amazon.com.
Out of print.
Chicano!: The History of the Mexican
American Civil Rights Movement (video). Reviewed by PBS.
Chicano!: The History of the Mexican American Civil Rights Movement,
by Francisco A. Rosales. Reviewed by Amazon.com.
Buy
from PBS.
The
Fight in the Fields: Cesar Chavez and the Farmworkers Movement,
(video). Reviewed by PBS. You can also click
here for more info on Cesar Chavez from LatinoLink.
The
Fight in the Fields: Cesar Chavez and the Farmworkers Movement, by Susan
Ferriss, Ricardo Sandoval, Diana Hembree (Editor), and Mic McKenzie. The companion
volume to the PBS documentary
film. You can also click
here for more info on Cesar Chavez from LatinoLink. Paperback edition published in 1998. Reviewed by
Amazon.com.
Third World Struggles
Freedom Now: Colonial Rule Is Overthrown in India and Africa.
Reviewed by Amazon.com. Also
reviewed
by PBS.
Buy
from Buy.com.
Gandhi
(video), by Ben Kingsley. An inspirational 2 1/2-hour movie on the life of Mohandas
K. Gandhi. You can also purchase it from buy.com. Reviewed by Amazon.com. Also
reviewed by Reel.com.
An
Autobiography: The Story of My Experiments With Truth, by Mohandas K.
Gandhi. Gandhi's life, in his own words. Reviewed by Amazon.com.
Mandela: Son of Africa, Father of a Nation
(video), starring Nelson Mandela and directed by Jo Menell and Angus Gibson.
Victorious ex-political prisoner and hero Nelson Mandela defeated apartheid and
led a peaceful democratic transition to a multiracial South Africa. Reviewed by
Amazon.com. Also
reviewed by Reel.com.
Guerrilla Wars: Cuba, Vietnam and Afghanistan. Reviewed by
Amazon.com. Also
reviewed
by PBS. Note: nonviolence is far, far
preferable to armed struggle.
Under
Fire, starring Gene Hackman and Nick Nolte, directed by Roger
Spottiswoode.
This movie, while not a documentary, tells the story of the Nicaraguan
revolution from the perspective of U.S. journalists. After
the successful Nicaraguan revolution, Archbishop Oscar
Romero
played a valiant but unsuccessful role in trying to halt military and right-wing
paramilitary abuses of power in El Salvador. I listed his movie under
repression because he was martyred instead of successful.
Reviewed by Amazon.com. Also
reviewed by Reel.com
People Power: The End of Soviet-Style Communism. Reviewed by
Amazon.com. Reviewed
by PBS.
Out of print.
The
World Atlas of Revolutions, by Andrew Wheatcroft. Published in
1983. Covers "The Antecedents, Character and History of the Revolutions of the
Modern Age- from the American Revolution to the Revolutionary Violence of the
1980s." Note: the author presents a starkly realistic view of the violence
and turmoil inherent in violent revolutions (and therefore makes a good indirect case for nonviolent activism).
60's Activism
The best history of the 1960's that I'm aware of is the
6-hour PBS video series
Making Sense of the Sixties.
Hopefully you can rent it from a video store or library.
Buy
from Buy.com.
Berkeley in the Sixties,
directed by Mark Kitchell. A lively 2-hour documentary. The Berkeley
Free Speech Movement (FSM) kicked off the 60's student protest movement and
Berkeley was an epicenter of activism throughout the 60's. You can also buy it from buy.com. Reviewed by
Amazon.com. Also
reviewed by Reel.com
Young Blood: Baby Boomers Rock Society For Change. Reviewed by
Amazon.com. Also
reviewed
by PBS.
Hair (video). You can also
buy
it from buy.com.
Reviewed by Amazon.com. Also
reviewed by Reel.com.
Buy
from buy.com.
The '60s
(video). This 200-minute movie, while not a documentary, conveys the rebellious
spirit of the 60's. Produced in 1999. You can also buy it from buy.com. Reviewed by Amazon.com. Also
reviewed by Reel.com
Ecology Activism
Endangered Planet. Reviewed by Amazon.com. Reviewed
by PBS.
The
Green Revolution: The American Environmental Movement, 1962-1992, by Kirkpatrick Sale. A 108-page history of the Green or environmental movement in America from
1962-1992. Chapters
include origins, sixties seedtime, 1962-70, doomsday decade, 1970-1980, the
Reagan reaction, 1980-1988, endangered earth, 1988-1992, and prospects.
Reviewed by Amazon.com.
Ecofeminist History
The
Chalice and the Blade: Our History, Our Future, by Riane Eisler.
This book gets some rave reviews.
Ashley Montagu even calls it "the most important book since Charles Darwin's Origin
of Species. It analyzes spirituality and society from prehistory through the
feminist and liberation movements today from a feminist perspective. Reviewed by
Amazon.com.
Also see the section on Women's
Spirituality for additional radical history books and videos that span the timeframe
from prehistory through the emergence of patriarchy and later the emergence of the
Judeo-Christian tradition.
A Green History of the World: The Environment and the
Collapse of Great Civilizations, by Clive Ponting. Reviewed by Amazon.com.
The National Women's History Project offers the
Women's History Catalog.
Beyond
Beef: The Rise and Fall of the Cattle Culture, by Jeremy Rifkin. This
book traces the important history of cattle and cattle culture from prehistory through
today. He puts a different spin on history, beginning by pointing out that the
Indo-European or Kurgan invaders who conquered Old Europe in prehistory (and who,
according to Eisler and Gimbutas introduced patriarchy and militarism to Old Europe) had a
cattle-based economy. He claims that "Much of Western history is an account of
the ongoing struggle between two groupings, one herdsmen, the other agriculturalist, the
first depending on grass, the second on grain." [Beyond Beef, page
25.] Reviewed by Amazon.com.
For most of the last 500 years,
European colonialism has dominated world
history. Why did this occur? Here is one author's not-necessarily PC
explanation:
Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies, by Jared Diamond.
This book covers the last 13,000 years of human history, focusing
heavily on biology and human interaction with the earth's climate, crops, and livestock. This book claims that Europe, due to a favorable
climate, received a jump start in economic development that led to the development of
"guns, germs, and steel" that enabled 500 years
of European colonialism. Reviewed by
Amazon.com.
The Cartoon History of the Universe/Volumes 1-7, by Larry Gonick. Reviewed by
Amazon.com.
The Cartoon History of the Universe II: From the
Springtime of China to the Fall of Rome/Volumes 8-13, by
Larry Gonick. Reviewed by Amazon.com.
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