Remembering Howard Zinn
Aljazeera / Noam Chomsky
27-Jan-2012 (4 comments)

Editor's note: Today, January 27, is the second anniversary of the death of Howard Zinn. An active participant in the Civil Rights movement, he was dismissed in 1963 from his position as a tenured professor at Spelman College in Atlanta after siding with black women students in the struggle against segregation. In 1967, he wrote one of the first, and most influential, books calling for an end to the war in Vietnam. A veteran of the US Army Air Force, he edited The Pentagon Papers, leaked by whistleblower Daniel Ellsberg, and was later designated a "high security risk" by the FBI.His best-selling A People's History of the United States spawned a new field of historical study: People's Histories. This approach countered the traditional triumphalist examination of "history as written by the victors", instead concentrating on the poor and seemingly powerless; those who resisted imperial, cultural and corporate hegemony. Zinn was an award-winning social activist, writer and historian - and so who better to share his memory ... >>>

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Mash Ghasem

SN don't you find it ironic, that Zinn was opposed to IR

by Mash Ghasem on

that Chomsky and Zinn both were both in support of Iranian protestors against the coup, yet you have not had a single item on that little coup for three years. What gives?

 

Why is this coming in Italics? Italics is not from me.


پندارنیک

Me too, me too............

by پندارنیک on

I second Tiger's comment, and wonder why featured news is exclusively limited to the Iran-related items..............after all we're living in a global village..........or, are we?


Sahar Naaz

Thank you Tiger Lily

by Sahar Naaz on

for kind and encouraging words.


Tiger Lily

Thank you, Sahar Naaz

by Tiger Lily on

for all your contributions. 

Just to say, that some of us do read them appreciately.