Description: Contents: I. Copyright Page. Dedication Page. Author's Statement. Introduction: The banner of Che (Why Is Revolution Necessary, In the Early Stages); The sixties (Achievements, Turning Point, Self Criticism); Turning weakness into strength (Obstacles, Anti-Revolutionary Errors in Our Movement, Setbacks inflicted by the State); Continuing crisis at home (governmental Crisis, The Real and Phony Energy Crisis); What we think. II. Vietnam: Meaning of the ceasefire; International victory; National victory; All for Vietnam; Support the Vietnamese struggle; Four main issues (Attacks on the Liberated Zones, No Aid to Thieu, Healing the Wounds of War, Political Prisoners); A program to focus on Vietnam ( Justice to War Criminals - Amnesty for Resisters, The War to Explain the War, The Provisional Revolutionary Government of South Vietnam). III. On the road - impressions of U.S. history: In the beginning: genocide, slavery, racism; Native American resistance (the early stages); Black resistance to slavery and the rise of the abolitionist and women's movements; Reconstruction and betrayal; The opposition: miners, women, immigrants, Wobblies; The Great Depression and the Communist Party. IV. Imperialism in crisis - the third world: Monopoly capital; Imperialism means underdevelopment; Imperialism means racism and genocide; Imperialism means sexism; Neocolonialism (Defeats for Neocolonialism, Violent Counter revolution); Changes in world politics; The struggle continues ( Puerto Rico, Guinea-Bissau, The Palestinian Liberation Movement). V. Imperialism in crisis - the home front: Friends and enemies (The Anarchy of Production, The Condition of Life, The Changing Nature of the Working Class; Black and other third world people in the U.S. (The Black Nation -institutions of Racism - Black Culture, Black Power - Support for Self-Determination, Native Americans, The Chicano Struggle); The rising of women (The Condition of Women - Home and Family - Women's Work - Government Policies - Culture of Sexism, The Women's Movement, The Tasks for Revolutionary Women - Overcoming Class Privilege - Opposing Racism - Insurgent Institutions - Militancy) ; The youth rebellion (Youth Culture, The Armed Forces). VI. Against the common enemy: Go to the people; Politics in command (Internationalism, Women and Revolution, militancy); Revolution. List of illustrations. Bibliography. Publisher's statement. Distribution Committee Statement.
Price: 185 USD
Location: San Diego, California
End Time: 2024-03-03T22:44:05.000Z
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Restocking Fee: No
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Book Title: Prairie Fire: Revolutionary Anti-Imperialism
8 1/2" x 5 1/2": 186 pages
Narrative Type: Nonfiction
Original Language: English
Publisher: Communication Co.
Intended Audience: Adults
Edition: Jackraqbbit Press Edition
Publication Year: 1974
Type: Manifesto
Format: Paperback
Language: English
Era: 1970s
Author: Billy Ayers, Jeff Jones, Celia Sojourn, Bernardine Dohrn
Features: Illustrated
Genre: Politics & Society
Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
Topic: Counter Culture, Political Extremists, Political Manifestos, Radicalism