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E-raamat: Cost of Freedom: Voicing a Movement after Kent State 1970

  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Apr-2020
  • Kirjastus: Kent State University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781631014130
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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Apr-2020
  • Kirjastus: Kent State University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781631014130

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"The Cost of Freedom: Voicing a Movement after Kent State 1970 is a multi-genre collection describing the May 4, 1970, shootings at Kent State University, the aftermath, and the impact on wider calls for peace and justice. Fifty years after the National Guard killed four unarmed students, Susan J. Erenrich has gathered moving stories of violence, peace, and reflection, demonstrating the continued resonance of the events and the need for sustained discussion. This anthology includes poetry, personal narratives, photographs, songs, and testimonies-some written by eyewitnesses to the day of the shootings-as well as speeches from recent commemoration events and items related to the designation of the site on the National Register of Historic Places in 2016. Erenrich, who came to Kent State in 1975 as a college freshman, became a member of the May 4 Task Force, a student organization that continues to the present as an organizing group for marking the anniversary each year. Her involvement with the task forceled her to make the many connections with writers, artists, and memory-keepers that have built this collection of primary source material. While a number of books and articles over the years have treated the Kent State shootings and aftermath, this collection is unique in its focus on justice issues and its call for the future. The movement to seek justice, as Erenrich notes, is an ongoing one. These voices call to us to continue to move forward even as we learn from the past"--

The Cost of Freedom: Voicing a Movement after Kent State 1970 is a multi-genre collection describing the May 4, 1970, shootings at Kent State University, the aftermath, and the impact on wider calls for peace and justice. Fifty years after the National Guard killed four unarmed students, Susan J. Erenrich has gathered moving stories of violence, peace, and reflection, demonstrating the continued resonance of the events and the need for sustained discussion. This anthology includes poetry, personal narratives, photographs, songs, and testimonies—some written by eyewitnesses to the day of the shootings—as well as speeches from recent commemoration events and items related to the designation of the site on the National Register of Historic Places in 2016.

Erenrich, who came to Kent State in 1975 as a college freshman, became a member of the May 4 Task Force, a student organization that continues to the present as an organizing group for marking the anniversary each year. Her involvement with the task force led her to make the many connections with writers, artists, and memory-keepers that have built this collection of primary source material.

While a number of books and articles over the years have treated the Kent State shootings and aftermath, this collection is unique in its focus on justice issues and its call for the future. The movement to seek justice, as Erenrich notes, is an ongoing one. These voices call to us to continue to move forward even as we learn from the past.

Arvustused

"Fifty years later, what happened at Kent State on May 4, 1970, still reverberates, inviting reflection on orthodoxy, dissent, and power in the United States. This invaluable collection of primary source material captures the voices of those that have labored for truth and justice in the aftermath of that violent, fateful day."Christopher Strain, author of The Long Sixties: America, 19551973

"May 4, 1970. We all remember what happened at Kent Stateor do we? Susan Erenrich has collected memories, tributes, reflections, photographs, and testimonials from wounded students in her emotional book. Indeed, The Cost of Freedom is a collection of voices that never should be forgotten. This book is a monument to all those who died, were wounded, or, like me, were forever scarred on May 4, 1970."Terry Anderson, author of The Movement and the Sixties and five editions of The Sixties

Foreword ix
Kenneth Hammond
Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction xv
PART I MEMORIES
Anniversary, May 4, 1988
3(3)
Elaine Holstein
A Tribute to Arthur Krause: Delivered at Kent State University, May 4, 1989
6(5)
Kendra Lee Hicks Pacifico
May 4, 2000, Commemorative Program Speech
11(8)
Barry Levine
PART II PHOTOGRAPHS OF MAY 4, I97O
Guardsmen Beginning Advance on the Commons
19(1)
Chuck Ayers
Guardsmen Throwing Tear Gas
20(1)
KSU News Service
Prentice Hall Parking Lot
21(1)
KSU News Service
Four Students Killed by the Ohio National Guard
22(3)
KSU News Service
PART III EARLIER ACTIVISM BEFORE MAY 4, 1970
Thy Tears Might Cease
25(12)
Anthony Walsh
Save the Pooch
37(10)
Robert Stamps
PART IV THE SHOOTINGS: MAY 4, 1970
It's Alright, Ma, I'm Only Dying: An Eyewitness Report from Kent State
47(6)
Constance Nowakowski
A Reminiscence Thirty Years Later
53(6)
Roily Brown
A Short Reflection
59(6)
Curtis Lee Pittman (Jeter)
PART V RESPONSES NEAR AND FAR
The Battle of Washington
65(22)
Tom Riddle
A Very Young Activist
87(3)
Patricia Moseley
May 1970: North and South, Mountains and Deserts---and Blood
90(11)
John Hunter Gray
PART VI HALLOWED GROUND
Kent State: Destruction of Civil Liberties
101(10)
William G. Arthrell
Where Were You on May 4, 1970?
111(8)
James Huebner
PART VII LEGAL MANEUVERING AND THE COURTS
The Ruse of the Kent 25 Indictments
119(9)
Roseann "Chic" Canfora
May 4, 1988, Speech
128(4)
William Moses Kunstler
The Big Chill: The Stifling Effect of the Official Response to the Kent State Killings
132(9)
William Whitaker
Eulogy for Galen Keller Lewis
141(4)
Rev. Barbara Child
The Kent State Shootings after Nearly 50 Years: One Lawyer's Remembrance
145(12)
Sanford Jay Rosen
PART VIII TESTIMONIALS BY SOME OF THE WOUNDED STUDENTS
My Life Was Forever Changed
157(5)
Dean Kahler
Speech on May 4, 1984
162(6)
Tom Grace
May 4 Recollections
168(6)
John Cleary
Russell and Me: Surviving Kent State
174(15)
Joseph Lewis
PART IX TROUBADOURS OF CONSCIENCE
The Kent State Massacre
189(4)
Barbara Dane
Twenty Years Later
193(4)
Holly Near
Kent
197(3)
Greg Artzner
Terry Leonino
An Eyewitness Recollection Thirty Years after the Shootings
200(3)
Terry Leonino
You Carried Us: For Professor Glenn W. Frank (1928-93)
203(4)
Greg Artzner
Terry Leonino
PART X ANNUAL RITUALS AND HISTORIC MARKERS
The Candlelight Walk and Vigil
207(10)
Jerry M. Lewis
Parking Lot Dedication Remarks
217(4)
Carole A. Barbato
Preserving the Site and Story of the May 4, 1970, Kent State Shootings
221(40)
Laura L. Davis
PART XI LASTING LEGACIES
Why Is It So Cold in Northern Ohio?
261(4)
Mark Rudd
The Greater Kent State Era, 1968-70: Personal Transformations and Legacies of Student Rebellions and State Repression
265(10)
Darlene Clark Hine
Simple Themes and Complex Realities in the Spring of 1970
275(4)
Tom Dietz
Message from a May 4 Baby: (P)reflections on the Fiftieth Commemoration of May 4, 1970
279(19)
Idris Kabir Syed
Appendix: May 4, 1970, the Struggle for History and the Internet 298(11)
Michael Pacifico
Index 309
Susan J. Erenrich is a social movement history documentarian and professor at American University who uses the arts for social change to tell stories about transformational leadership, resilience, and societal shifts as a result of mobilization efforts by ordinary citizens. She has worked for more than four decades in nonprofit/arts administration, civic engagement, community service, and community organizing. She is also the editor of Freedom Is a Constant Struggle: An Anthology of the Mississippi Civil Rights Movement and Grassroots Leadership & the Arts for Social Change.