Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Fugitive Days

Also wanted to share a review of Bill Ayer's Fugitive Days that I wrote for my reader's advisory class...

Fugitive Days (2001)

Author: Bill Ayers

Genre: Nonfiction (Memoir)

Plot Summary: One of the founding members of 1960’s radical anti-war group, The Weather Underground, Bill Ayers tells his side of the story in Fugitive Days without boastfulness or apology. Beginning with his childhood explorations of drugs and youth culture, the adventurism of the late 1950’s and early 1960’s, Ayers paints a picture of a childhood of privilege and picket-fences lusting for life experience. After high school at a boarding school and years of dabbling in college, Ayers finds his political calling in philosophical texts and the Vietnam anti-war movement. Ayers describes his political and social philosophies in depth, taking time to quote political thinkers and rethink his positions of the time. From his early days in SDS to his more militant days in The Weather Underground, Ayers boldly and sanely gives a rationale for his motivations. As Ayers describes it, The Weather Underground was formed in response to a growing notion that anti-war activists should “bring the war home.” Indeed The Weather Underground, and all the cells it spawned, brought the war home to military recruiting sites, police precincts, and most famously the Pentagon, using homemade bombs and crude explosives, leaving their signature claim letters for the press and public to find after the fact. Terrorists to many, heroes to others, The Weather Underground disbanded after the end of the Vietnam war. This narrative is largely the story of getting to the point of desperation where violence made sense, living underground, turning oneself in to live a more public family life, and finally committing this hundred-mile-an-hour life to paper, reflecting, connecting.

Geographical Setting: various cities, United States
Time Period: 1965-1975

Appeal Characteristics: The themes of political radicalism and activism, socialism, communism, anarchism will appeal to readers interested in folks who have committed their lives to struggles for social justice. Further, explorations of white privilege, anti-racism and ethical activism abound. The setting of 1960’s America in the midst of a political and cultural revolution will appeal to both those who lived it and those who look back for lessons. Discussions of memory and the practice of writing a memoir, what is truth, will appeal to readers with a literary sensibility, as will the passionate and sometimes flowery prose. The pacing of the novel is perfect, even though it is obvious that Ayers has lived through and seen a lot, his narrative is cohesive and coherent while still suggesting there’s more to the story. It moves at an even pace and keeps the reader interested through personal relationships, discussions of politics and history, and a subtle humor and wit that becomes characteristic by the end of the memoir.

Read-alikes: Readers who enjoyed learning about The Weather Underground would greatly enjoy to see The Weather Underground by Sam Green and Bill Siegel, a fascinating documentary about the life and times of the group including interviews with numerous past members, most notably Bill Ayers and his wife Bernadine Dohrn. Readers who would like to read a more straight forward and scholarly history of The Weather Underground would enjoy Outlaws of America: The Weather Underground and the Politics of Solidarity by Dan Berger. Readers who enjoyed a more erudite political and philosophical memoir about growing up during the Vietnam-era would also enjoy Michael Albert’s Remembering Tomorrow: A Memoir which explores his childhood, politics, and involvement in SDS, which The Weather Underground splintered off of, as well as his assessment of the future. Albert’s narrative is a little bit more sober, but would still appeal to readers interested in this time period and moreover, the politics involved, namely anti-capitalism. Readers more interested in discussions of anti-racism and white privilege would enjoy Stokley Carmichael’s memoir, Ready For Revolution that explores the Civil Rights Movement, which is peripheral but important in Fugitive Days . Further, readers who enjoyed the time period and discussions of the Vietnam war and U.S. policy would probably enjoy reading about it through the eyes of someone who was immersed in the reporting for it. John Hess’ My Times: A Memoir of Dissent, is the memoir of a reporter who worked for the New York Times during the Vietnam war.

Red Flags: Profanity, discussions of sexual liberation, drug use, radical politics, violence against the state, anti-capitalism.

And then there's the New Castle prison uprising -or- the problems with prison privitization

Had enough time today to read the papers and discovered that there was a prison riot here in Indiana that, according to the reports, seemed to stem from conflicts caused by good ole Mitch Daniel's prisoner-importation program. Now they've distributed the "problem" prisoners all over the state. Brilliant. Way to be proactive. This would be a good time to look at systemic issues rather than shipping prisoners from Arizona all over the state of Indiana. Huh?

Here's some links:

Associated Press story

Indianapolis Star w/ tons of discussion

Whew.

I emerge triumphant... Or something like that.

School is done for the semester.

Hello quarries, sunshine, bike rides, dog kisses, etc!

Sunday, March 4, 2007

Friday, March 2, 2007

good day












Song of the day:
"Make You Feel That Way" --Blackalicious

Up an early for the hope of a brand new day
See a homie you ain't seen since back in the day
Fresh haircut fitted wit a fat ass fade
End of work, we chilling on a Saturday
How you felt when you first heard the data came
Rakim KRS hey I had that tape
Cooling out with ol girl on a fat ass date
Find a hundred dollar bill wow man that's great
Get promoted at your job up to management
Plot a long time finally a plan has made it
Time I feel I wanna shout, man its real that way
Wanna think of things that make you feel that way

Christmas day when your mamma got your first bike
Type of feeling when you went and when your first fight
How your team felt winning championship games
Celebrate in a huddle dancing in this rain
Have a thought see a shooting star cross your screen
Put in hard work finally your living your dream
Deaf man get his hearing now in come vibes
Blind man get sight see his first sunrise
Dumb man speaking out, now he's load and clear
Earth through your chout smile so proud ya wear
Going in your third eye for the styles ya hear

Making music that'll bump for a thousand years
Eating right feeling conscience like health is first
Said a prayer that's sincere and you felt it work
Times I feel I wanna shout, man it's real that way
When I'm thinking things that make you feel that way

All up in her vibe something coming over me
Summer days more likely that you notice breezes
Winter days more likely that you notice heat
When I'm warm more likely that you notice me
In the dark it's more likely that you notice light
In the light more likely that you notice night
Hungry more appreciation for that meal

Dead broke more appreciation for that grill
A bad day'll make you really notice ones that's good
And that'll make things a little better understood

Times I feel I wanna shout, man it's real that way
When I think of things that make you feel that way
Make you feel that way...

(Ya know its like ahh like the most greatest feeling
you could ever feel you like just total illation. Sunny
day, just that day. You know its just like you know
just the most joyous feeling you could ever comprehend.
You know, chilling with your family. You know just you
know just really really feeling, feeling the moment,
with the folks. Ya know really really really just
chilling. It's love. It's love. It's love)



Friday, February 23, 2007

Ridiculous brain thought of the day:

If I just keep running, this song will come true!

Sometimes when I'm running I tell myself crazy things will happen if I can just keep the momentum going. It's a good way to keep going, but today I took it to a whole new level. I made a new running mix and put Neil Young's "Let's Impeach the President" on it... musically, a terrible song (does anyone else worry that he's about to croak when he sings 'thank god he's cracking down on steroids'?), but lyrically a catchy and inspiring song. This song came on just as I was thinking about walking the rest of the way home, but I started to convince myself that if I could just run the rest of the way home it might just come true--Bush would get impeached--it kept me going, and I made it all the way home.

Started reading Barbarians at the Gates of the Public Library: How Postmodern Consumer Capitalism Threatens Democracy, Civil Education and the Public Good by Ed D'Angelo this morning. So far a really interesting read about the future of libraries not as democratic institutions, but as just another institution fueled by and controlled by consumer culture. These concerns are very pertinent as it seems libraries are following more business-oriented practices and models these days. I hope to finish it soon and provide a more thorough review.

Otherwise, the last books I have read have been a Christian/Inspirational title and a Romance, so no reviews for those, as I wouldn't necessarily recommend them.

Got home from work the other night and got sucked into the Independent Lens special on hip hop called Hip Hop: Beyond Beats and Rhymes. The filmmaker, Byron Hurt, focused a lot on issues of hypermasculinity and homophobia/homoeroticism in hip hop culture. I liked his treatment of these subjects because he seemed genuinely interested in exploring the depth of them and looking at larger cultural factors rather than playing the moral blame game that people are so prone to do with hip hop. Highly recommended.

On the media tip, this morning's edition of Making Contact featured a radio documentary called Legacy of Torture about the torturing of Black Panthers in New Orleans in the 70's, coercion of testimony, etc. Very disturbing, but also very pertinent as we hear about these men getting subpoenaed by grand juries today, 30 years later, in connection with the same crimes!

Monday, February 19, 2007

Slush.

I finally pumped up my bike tires and lubed up the chain after a week of driving a borrowed car and feeling dependent on a big machine to get around town. I always feel so strange driving, so heavy and burdensome. I felt almost weightless this afternoon riding my bike to class listening to Richard and Linda Thompson, day-dreaming.

Spent the weekend in Logansport where the snow was waist-high and drifts were chest-high in parts. Toby jumped through the snow like a rabbit and made hundreds of dog-snow-angels.

On the ride home, we listened to Art Bell's Coast to Coast and I learned that UFO sightings are on the up and up. However, abductions are not being as heavily reported right now, just sightings. Also, Shadow People are a common call, leading Art Bell to conclude that another dimension is present.