You Say You Want a Revolution: SDS, PL, and Adventures in Building a Worker-Student Alliance

You Say You Want a Revolution: SDS, PL, and Adventures in Building a Worker-Student Alliance

You Say You Want a Revolution: SDS, PL, and Adventures in Building a Worker-Student Alliance

You Say You Want a Revolution: SDS, PL, and Adventures in Building a Worker-Student Alliance

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Overview

Today, Students for a Democratic Society is often portrayed as the drama of the good early 1960s SDS turning into Weatherman, the small faction whose story ended in a bombed-out New York townhouse. 

            The reality was quite different. SDS at its apex in 1968/69 numbered 100,000 students whose political views reflected a rainbow of ideologies exploring what a new American Left could be with a willingness to risk everything to stop the war in Vietnam and win social justice. When SDS splintered in June 1969, a majority of the delegates supported the program of its Worker-Student Alliance caucus: building a strategic alliance between students and the working class to achieve the movement’s goals.

The contributors in this book were mostly members of WSA, whose formation was initiated by the Maoist Progressive Labor Party. Here they recount and evaluate their participation in the struggles of the 1960s and early 1970s, from trips to revolutionary Cuba defying the US travel ban to student strikes, labor and community alliances, and campaigns against the war and racism across the country, from Columbia and Harvard, Texas and Iowa, to San Francisco State and UC Berkeley. These accounts are both optimistic, from those still inspired, and bitter, from those now critical of their involvement. The stories they tell speak across the years, as a new generation—from Black Lives Matter to Fight for $15 to the Parkland students—faces decisions about how to organize and build alliances to stop wars abroad, confront racial oppression at home, fight for immigrant rights, and end violence and neoliberal exploitation.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780578451657
Publisher: John F. Levin
Publication date: 01/31/2019
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 404
File size: 7 MB

Table of Contents

Introduction by John F. Levin          

1 We Danced Everywhere by Ellen S. Israel          

2 A Revolutionary Journey by Dick J. Reavis          

3 My Sister, Lynn by Paula Campbell Munro        

4 I Was More Baptist Than John the Baptist by Becky Brenner   

5 My SDS Activist Years in New Orleans  by Eric A. Gordon      

6 “On Strike! Shut It Down!” by John F. Levin       

7 A New World Opens by Margaret Leahy            

8 Toward Revolutionary Art by Ernie Brill

9 The Stakes Were Higher Than We Knew by Anatole Anton     

10 I Might Have to Kill Vietnamese People by Michael Balter

11 PL and Me by Ed Morman

12 PL, the Struggle at Columbia, and the Road to Irrelevance by Eddie Goldman

13 The East Was Red by Susan Tarr

14 The (Broken) Promise of the Worker-Student Alliance: Building a Base in Iowa by Steven Hiatt with Commentary by Bruce Clark

15 Movement Learning: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly by Joe Berry

16 A Life on the Left by Joan Kramer

17 The Spread of Maoism: A Story by Barbara Selfridge

18 “Princeton’ll Straighten You Out!” by Henry Picciotto

19 Growing Up in the ’60s: From Introvert to Organizerby by Frank Kashner

20 PL Reconsidered by Emily Berg

21 Global Boston by Debbie Levenson

22 The Harvard Strike of ’69 and What Happened Next by Mary Summers

23 A Texas Republican’s Path to SDS/WSA and PL by John Mitchell

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