We Have Not Been Moved : Resisting Racism and Militarism in 21st Century America. için kapak resmi
We Have Not Been Moved : Resisting Racism and Militarism in 21st Century America.
Başlık:
We Have Not Been Moved : Resisting Racism and Militarism in 21st Century America.
Yazar:
Martínez, Elizabeth Betita.
ISBN:
9781604868005
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Fiziksel Tanımlama:
1 online resource (609 pages)
İçerik:
Cover -- Copyright -- Contents -- Foreword: King's Truth: Revolution and America's Crossroads -- Resisting Racism and War: An Introduction -- or, What Will It Take to Move Forward? -- How the Moon Became a Stranger -- By Any Means Necessary: Two Images -- I. Connections, Contexts, and Challenges -- Helping Hands -- Wild Poppies -- Are Pacifists Willing to Be Negroes? A 1950s Dialogue on Fighting Racism and Militarism, Using Nonviolence and Armed Struggle 21 Dave Dellinger, Robert Franklin Williams, Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., and Dorothy Day -- Revolutionary Democracy: A Speech Against the Vietnam War -- Southern Peace Walk: Two Issues or One? -- Nonviolence and Radical Social Change -- On Revolution and Equilibrium (Excerpt) -- Responsible Pacifism and the Puerto Rican Conflict -- Where Was the Color in Seattle? Looking for Reasons Why the Great Battle Was So White -- Looking for Color in the Anti-War Movement -- Combating Oppression Inside and Outside -- II. (Re)Defining Racism and Militarism: What Qualifies? Who Decides? -- Continental Walk, 1976-Washington, D.C. -- river of a different truth -- Nonviolent Change of Revolutionary Depth: A Conversation with -- Regaining a Moral Compass: The Ongoing Truth of King's Vision -- Four Vignettes on the Road of the Broken Rifle: Reflections on War and Resistance -- Questioning Our Reality -- Finding the Other America -- On Being a Good Anti-Racist -- The Culture of White Privilege Is to Remain Silent -- Towards a Radical White Identity -- Weaving Narratives: The Construction of Whiteness -- The Pan-Africanization of Black Power: True History, Coalition-Building, and the All-African People's Revolutionary Party: An Interview with Bob Brown, Organizer for the All- African People's Revolutionary Party (GC).

Rescuing Civil Rights from Black Power: Collective Memory and Saving the State in Twenty-First-Century Prosecutions of 1960s-Era Cases -- The Unacceptability of Truth: Of National Lies and Racial America -- Race, History, and "A Nation of Cowards" -- III. Chickens and Eggs: War, Race, and Class -- Amache: Japanese-American Relocation Center, 1942-1945-Post Office -- Amache -- The Antiwar Campaign: More on Force without Violence -- Let's Talk about Green Beans: An Interview with Dorothy Cotton -- I Beg to Differ -- Militarism and Racism: A Connection? -- Looking at the White Working Class Historically -- Chinweizu, War, and Reparations -- On Being White and Other Lies: A History of Racism in the United States -- Race, Prisons, and War: Scenes from the History of U.S. Violence -- IV. The Roots and Routes of War: Patriarchy and Heterosexism -- Dean of Students Ann Marie Penzkover and Her Niece Mariah, Wisconsin -- Genocide: remembering Bengal, 1971 -- Why We Need Women's Actions and Feminist Voices for Peace -- Terror, Torture, and Resistance -- Race, Sex, and Speech in Amerika -- Disarmament and Masculinity -- The Master's Tools Will Never Dismantle the Master's House -- Practical, Common Sense, Day-to-Day Stuff: An Interview with Mandy Carter -- The Rise of Eco-Feminism: The Goddess Revived -- Beyond the Color of Fear: An Interview with Victor Lewis (Excerpt) -- The Politics of Accountability -- Tools for White Guys Who Are Working for Social Change -- Heteropatriarchy and the Three Pillars of White Supremacy: Rethinking Women of Color Organizing -- V. The Roots and Routes of War: Nationalism, Religion, Ageism -- Kafka's Amerika -- Ten Years in Freedom -- Fragmented Nationalism: Right-Wing Responses to September 11 in Historical Context.

Whiteness Is Not Inevitable! Why the Emphasis on White- Skin Privilege Is White-Chauvinist and Why the Problematic of "Race" Needs to be Replaced with the Restoration of the National Question(s) -- The Content of Our Character: An Interview with José López -- Truly Human: Spiritual Paths in the Struggle Against Racism, Militarism, and Materialism -- White Like Me: A Woman Rabbi Gazes into the Mirror of American Racism -- Dark Satanic Mills: William Blake and the Critique of War -- Draft Resistance and the Politics of Identity and Status -- War Resistance and Root Causes: A Strategic Exchange -- VI. Where Do We Go from Here? Organizing Against War and Racism -- Perpetual Peace Matchboxes -- Before and After: The Struggle Continues -- A Reflection on Privilege -- We Have Not Been Moved: How the Peace Movement Has Resisted Dealing with Racism in Our Ranks -- CISPES in the 1980s: Solidarity and Racism in the Belly of the Beast -- To Live Is to Resist -- Not Showing Up: Blacks, Military Recruitment and the Anti- War Movement -- A Challenge to Institutional Racism -- Where's the Color in the Anti-War Movement? Organizers Connect the War Abroad to the War at Home -- An Open Letter to Anti-Oppression/Diversity Trainers -- New Orleans: A Choice Between Destruction and Reparations -- Why Not Freedom for Puerto Rico? Building Solidarity in the United States: An Interview with Jean Zwickel -- "National Security" and the Violation of Women: Militarized Border Rape at the U.S.-Mexico Border -- From Bases to Bars: The Military & Prison Industrial Complexes Go "Boom" -- Dismantling Peace Movement Myths -- Structural Racism and the Obama Presidency -- Notes on an Orientation to the Obama Presidency -- Where Was the White in Phoenix? A Ten-Year Movement Update -- Moving Forward: Ideas for Solidarity and Strategy to Strengthen Multiracial Peace Movements.

An Anti-Racist Gandhi Manifesto -- VII. AfterPoems -- Why War Is Never a Good Idea -- Reflections after the June 12th March for Disarmament -- Peace (a poem for Maxine Green) -- Stop the Violence Matchbox Fishbowl -- Acknowledgments -- Contributors -- Index.
Özet:
Elizabeth Betita Martínez is a Chicana feminist and a longtime community organizer, activist, and educator. She is the author of 500 Years of Chicana Women's History, 500 Years of Chicano History in Pictures, and De Colores Means All of Us: Latina Views for a Multi-Colored Century. She is the cofounder and director of the Institute for MultiRacial Justice. She lives in San Francisco. Matt Meyer is an educator-activist, the founding cochair of the Peace and Justice Studies Association, and the former chair of the Consortium on Peace Research, Education and Development (COPRED) and War Resisters League. He is the author of Time Is Tight: Transformative Education in Eritrea, South Africa, and the USA, coauthor of Guns and Gandhi in Africa: Pan-African Insights on Nonviolence, Armed Struggle and Liberation, and editor of Let Freedom Ring: A Collection of Documents from the Movements to Free U.S. Political Prisoners. He lives in Brooklyn. Mandy Carter is a longtime human rights and nonviolent activist who has worked with the War Resisters League, the Human Rights Campaign in Washington, DC, the National Black Gay and Lesbian Leadership Forum, and Southerners on New Ground. She lives in Durham, North Carolina. Alice Walker is a poet, short story writer, novelist, essayist, anthologist, teacher, editor, publisher, womanist and activist. Her 1982 book, The Color Purple, earned her the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction (the first African American woman writer to receive this award) and the National Book Award. Walker's awards and fellowships include a Guggenheim Fellowship, a residency at Yaddo, and the 2010 Lennon/Ono Grant for Peace. Sonia Sanchez is a poet and the author of Homegirls and Handgrenades.
Notlar:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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