Readings from Voices of a People's History of the United States
Readings from Voices of a People's History of the United States
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Product Details:
Publisher:
Seven Stories Press
Publication Date:
November 01, 2006
Language:
English
ISBN:
1583227520
Package Length:
5.51 inches
Package Width:
4.88 inches
Package Height:
0.39 inches
Package Weight:
0.18 pounds
Average Customer Rating:
based on 2 reviews
Description:
The most bold and empowered words of America's past are resurrected here by some of the leading voices of the present. Inspired and heartrending, Howard Zinn, Anthony Arnove, John Sayles, Sarah Jones, Paul Robeson Jr., Lili Taylor, Wallace Shawn, Leslie Silva, and Brian Jones perform the rousing words of dissent that have shaped and quickened the pulse of a nation.
This audio CD consists of twenty-one readings thoughtfully selected by Zinn and Arnove from Voices of a People's History of the United States, the long-awaited primary source companion to Zinn's seminal A People's History of the United States. Among them, a spirited Lili Taylor as a willful Susan B. Anthony objects to her arrest for "knowingly voting without having a lawful right to vote," Paul Robeson Jr. delivers his father's unread statement before the House Un-American Activities Committee from the height of the McCarthy era, and Sarah Jones reads Native American resister and Shawnee leader Tecumseh's stirring appeal to the Osage people to unite against colonial forces.
At times heartwarming, other times wrenching, but always moving, these lively renditions bring the brazen spirit of rebellion into your living room.
Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review:
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Great CD!Nov 29, 2008 "Readings From Voices of a People's History of the United States" is one of the most entertaining CDs I have listened to in a long time. I know, I know, you're thinking "Didn't you just say HISTORY? Yawn!" but it's true - this CD really is entertaining.
If you ever listen to recorded books, you know that the choice of reader makes a huge difference to your enjoyment. Here, the producers of this CD made excellent choices, with most of the cast of readers also contributing acting talent to their roles.
I have read and even heard Sojourner Truth's "Ain't I a Woman?" more times than I can remember, but have never enjoyed it as much as this reading by Kerry Washington. As I worked to get out the votes in our recent historic election, I listened and relistened to Christina Kirk and Josh Brolin re-enacting Susan B. Anthony's address to Judge Ward Hunt and Hunt's futile attempts to silence her during her trial for "knowingly voting without having a lawful right to vote." As people debated whether a black man was electable, I heard Paul Robeson Jr. (what brilliant casting!) read from Langston Hughes' writing about dreams deferred.
Josh Brolin also brings to life Joseph Plumb Martin, a soldier during the American Revolution whose writings reveal that being a foot soldier in the Continental Army was a long way from the glory our history books have preserved. Although I am about as WASPy as one can get, my father, who fought overseas with the Army Air Corps in WW II, taught me about and never stopped being ashamed of the detention of Japanese Americans detailed in Sandra Oh's reading of Yuri Kochiyama's "Then Came the War." The list of star performances continues with Sarah Jones, Viggo Mortensen, Lili Taylor, Danny Glover, Marisa Tomei, and many more.
This CD may well inspire you to read the book from which the readings are excerpted, "A People's History of the United States" (it has me). However, the CD stands on its own as a powerful, moving performance and really, I promise you will be entertained!
7 of 12 found the following review helpful:
Brief but enormously valuableJul 30, 2007 People who know me, and my familiarity with the Washington, DC tourist market, know that I've argued that tourists, particularly young ones, in the nation's capital feel comfortable with "founding fathers" being Disney characters, and our history being a litany of one victory after another over savages, and foriegners not up to our standards.
It's impossible for any honest person to not challenge that sort of fairy tale.
Around thirty years ago, I read Zinn's "A People's History of the United States." First, for those who think that's some kind of Marxist diatribe (before the word "liberal" was made dirty by some of your favorite rightwing talk show demagogues), it isn't. Many have reminded us over the centuries that history is often written by the victor. So there is an inherent bias of the victor toward his or her objectives. Zinn's book challenges some of that. It's well researched, well thought out, not just leftie diatribes. So to this day I recommend it.
Then we often lose track of the underdog. We talk about Washington and Jefferson, maybe even include that they owned slaves. But do we hear the side of the slave? (I was at a plantation in Charleston last January in which the docent made it sound like the slaves rather liked it there as their masters treated them so well. I reminded her that the slaves had no choice but to be there. They were effectively abducted from their home lands, and, if they were to have escaped, their chance of death was pretty great.)
This CD, while short, starts with part of a speech by Bartolme de Las Casas who knew what Columbus's crew really did to the Indians they encounted. It includes part of a speech by Frederick Douglass on what July 4 means to black people. There are excerpts of speeches on imperialism (Mark Twain) women (Susan B. Anthony and Sojourner Truth), patriotism (Emma Goldman) and others.
I acknowledge that we may have a tendency to romanticize excerpts in particular. For instance, those of us who challenge the norm sometimes make saints--nearly perfect people--of those we oppressed. And we must remember they were human too. Just remember that the excerpts and the speeches fit into the times and historical circumstances in which they were made. But the "other side" MUST BE heard. This is a great intro to that other side, and it may entice the listener to read the book by the same name, or others which, one hopes, would moderate the view of some Americans that we are the pinnacle of perfection.