Sunday, November 2, 2008
Oral historian Studs Terkel dies at age 96
Pulitzer Prize-winning author, radio host and activist Studs Terkel died in his Chicago, Illinois, home Friday at the age of 96.
"He could often be found behind a tape recorder talking to the people who would eventually become the basis for his books. Terkel became famous, if not synonymous with oral histories, for his ability to cast a light on the working class.
"Oral history preceded the written word," Terkel told CNN in 2000. "Oral history is having people tell their own stories and bringing it forth.
"That's what history's about: the oral history of the unknowns that make the wheel go 'round. And that's what I'm interested in."
Pulitzer Prize-winning author, radio host and activist Studs Terkel died in his Chicago, Illinois, home Friday at the age of 96.
Terkel had grown frail since the publication last year of his memoir, "Touch and Go," said Gordon Mayer, vice president of the Community Media Workshop, which Terkel had supported.
"I'm still in touch, but I'm ready to go," he said last year at his last public appearance with the workshop, a nonprofit that recognizes Chicago reporters who take risks in covering the city.
"My dad led a long, full, eventful -- sometimes tempestuous -- satisfying life," his son Dan said in a statement.
"The last time I saw him, he was up, about, and mad as hell about the Cubs," workshop President Thom Clark said in the statement.
Terkel, known for his portrayal of ordinary people young and old, rich and poor, won a Pulitzer Prize in 1985 for his remembrances of World War II, "The Good War." iReport.com: Remebering the legacy of Studs Terkel
Terkel was born in New York but moved to Chicago, where his parents ran a small hotel. Terkel would sit in the hotel lobby watching droves of people arguing, fighting, ranting and telling stories.
"That hotel was far more of an education to me than the University of Chicago was," Studs told CNN in 2000.
It seems that beginning would pave the way for Terkel's love of passing on people's oral histories. He could often be found behind a tape recorder talking to the people who would eventually become the basis for his books. Terkel became famous, if not synonymous with oral histories, for his ability to cast a light on the working class.
"Oral history preceded the written word," Terkel told CNN in 2000. "Oral history is having people tell their own stories and bringing it forth.
"That's what history's about: the oral history of the unknowns that make the wheel go 'round. And that's what I'm interested in."
In an interview with Lou Waters on CNN in 1995, Terkel spoke about his book "Coming of Age," which explored the lives of people who have been "scrappers" all of their lives. Inside the book are the stories of people between the ages of 70 and 95, a group he called "the truth tellers."
"Who are the best historians? Who are the storytellers?" Terkel asked. "Who lived through the Great Depression of the '30s, World War II that changed the whole psyche and map of the world, a Cold War, Joe McCarthy, Vietnam, the '60s, that's so often put down today and I think was an exhilarating and hopeful period, and, of course, the computer and technology. Who are the best ones to tell the story? Those who've borne witness to it. And they're our storytellers."
After Terkel's wife died in 1999, he began working on a book about death, eventually called "Will the Circle Be Unbroken? Reflections on Death, Rebirth, and Hunger for a Faith."
"It's about life," Terkel said in 2000 when asked about the project. "How can one talk about life without saying sometime it's going to end? It makes the value of life all the more precious."
Saturday, November 1, 2008
Change we can really believe in...
An interesting take on Shepard Fairley's 'Obama' posters.
"Confronted with the quasi-deification (Guevarafication?) of Barack Obama, I'd like to present some change agents that live by the mantra that others merely utter: Change comes from the bottom-up. Power to the people. We are the ones we have been waiting for!"
Check out the original content here.
Also featured is Emiliano Zapata, and Peter Kropotkin.
"Confronted with the quasi-deification (Guevarafication?) of Barack Obama, I'd like to present some change agents that live by the mantra that others merely utter: Change comes from the bottom-up. Power to the people. We are the ones we have been waiting for!"
Check out the original content here.
Also featured is Emiliano Zapata, and Peter Kropotkin.
October 15th 'Terrorism' Update
A quick update on the so-called 'terrorism' arrests over one year on. Remember that this is an ongoing and lenghty process designed to push the topic back into the fineprint of the press, and our collective memory — to forget, and in short, to ignore, the farce that is continuing to distrupt the lives those accused and their communities...
From Indymedia:
The Crown has issued an indictment today against 18 people arrested in the police raids of October 15th 2007 in Ruatoki, Auckland, Hamilton, Whakatane, Palmerston North, Wellington and elsewhere.
Five of the 18 people have been charged with participation in a criminal gang under section 98A of the Crimes Act.
These charges are a desperate attempt by the Government to save face after the Solicitor-General found 'insufficient evidence' to bring charges under the Terrorism Suppression Act. The Crown seeks to characterise political activists who support Tino Rangatiratanga and dissent from the Government as criminals.
From 'Global Peace and Justice Auckland':
The police decision to lay charges of participating in a criminal gang against five of the Urewera arrestees is ludicrous. Having failed to brand these activists as terrorists the police now want to try to brand them as criminals.
Why lay these charges more than a year after the arrests? Rather than being serious about these charges it seems to be an attempt to shift the whole case to the High Court rather than have it heard in the District Court. It seems the police will leave no stone unturned in trying to make the case look more serious than it is and in the process to salvage some credibility from the hopeless mess they have got themselves into.
In a bare-faced abuse of the legal process the police also intend to
relay charges dismissed at depositions. This is desperate stuff
indeed.
The police have been on a hiding to nothing since their dramatic
"anti-terror" raids on October 15th last year seized of two pig
hunting rifles. Their case is based on a lot of hot air and stupid
conversations. Were those charged not political activists the police
would have issued warnings for technical breaches of firearms laws
rather that attempt the Keystone Cops prosecutions.
For the police this is a "double or nothing" gamble.
Since their dramatic police conference telling the country how they
had thwarted terrorist activity the police case has unravelled
rapidly. The Solicitor General found there was insufficient evidence
to lay charges under the Terrorism Suppression Act and the police case
has rapidly unravelled since then.
The waste of public resources is already in the millions and will be
in the tens of millions before it is over.
And finally, a rather insightful comment on Indymedia:
"The point you are blindly missing ... is the states' historical reaction to any Maori movement of any consequence that dared to challenge the great farce that is crown sovereignty, movements from the Kingitanga, Titokowaru's movement, Te Kooti's movement, Te Ua's movement, Te Tohu and Te Whiti's movement, Rua Kenana's movement and now the Tuhoe Nation movement.
The states response has been the same in EVERY instance, armed forces sent in to crush the will of the people to continue the movement.
Armed forces did not enter Tuhoe land to arrest people caught up in operation 8, except for one of them, the rest did not live in the Tuhoe area yet the majority of armed forces converged on that area.
Armed forces entered the Tuhoe area currently under claim as the base area of an independant Tuhoe State, Te Urewera, as stated by Tamati Kruger in a TV1 interview following the raids. They entered that area to send a message to the people of Tuhoe as a reminder that they have more firepower and resources than Tuhoe does.
Their message was simple. They had come to show those renegade areas in Te Urewera who is boss. A clear reminder of the show of force used on Rua Kenana and the trumped up charges of sedition that followed.
They were there to break the will of the people to want independence. The rest, the charges, and now the indictments, is just a charade, an illusion if you like."
Some good links:
October 15th Solidarity
Indymedia
And I still have $10 posters for sale, which would greatly help the
defendants cause if anyone would like to buy one of me. Just get in
touch.
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