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Two years after Hurricane Maria hit, Puerto Ricans are still reeling from its effects and aftereffects. Features writings by prominent Puerto Rican journalists, essayists, and award-winning fiction writers discussing their experiences of documenting, investigating, and making narrative sense of the storm, its aftermath, and the preexisting crisis that conditioned this historic disaster. The book features an interview with Naomi Klein, author of ¿The Battle for Paradise¿
Staughton Lynd’s brilliant and masterful arguments against the Vietnam War and the best tactics and strategies to end it.
A collection of radical reconsiderations and creative critiques that aims to expose, disrupt, and uproot carcerality.
An anthology of nonfiction by writers of color that transcends form, So We Can Know is a record of varied and intricate relationships to pregnancy.
A TIMELY, DEEPLY HUMAN, AND URGENT COLLECTION: After Life features diverse perspectives from several Pulitzer Prize-winning historians, multiple Guggenheim Fellows, two Bancroft Prize winners, and some of the brightest legal minds, activist-scholars, and politicians in the United States todayFOR THOSE WHO CONNECT WITH AND RESPECT THE WORK OF W.E.B. DUBOIS, JENYM WARD, IBRAM X. KENDI AND KESHA N. BLAIN: Afterlife uses everyday stories to show both the universality and diversity of experiences in 2020 America.CUTTING EDGE THINKERS AND ACTIVISTS: Edited and introduced by three activist American historians/political commentators, this timely collection of twenty-one vibrant essays by some of the most renowned writers and public intellectuals today combines personal reflections and historical framing of pre-vaccination pandemic America.
Staughton Lynd’s brilliant and masterful arguments against the Vietnam War and the best tactics and strategies to end it.
A collection of radical reconsiderations and creative critiques that aims to expose, disrupt, and uproot carcerality.
An anthology of nonfiction by writers of color that transcends form, So We Can Know is a record of varied and intricate relationships to pregnancy.
A visual and verbal narrative of the grit and gentleness that comprises Southwestern Latinx communities through photographs by Tony Salazar and a series of poems from José Olivarez.
A TIMELY, DEEPLY HUMAN, AND URGENT COLLECTION: After Life features diverse perspectives from several Pulitzer Prize-winning historians, multiple Guggenheim Fellows, two Bancroft Prize winners, and some of the brightest legal minds, activist-scholars, and politicians in the United States todayFOR THOSE WHO CONNECT WITH AND RESPECT THE WORK OF W.E.B. DUBOIS, JENYM WARD, IBRAM X. KENDI AND KESHA N. BLAIN: Afterlife uses everyday stories to show both the universality and diversity of experiences in 2020 America.CUTTING EDGE THINKERS AND ACTIVISTS: Edited and introduced by three activist American historians/political commentators, this timely collection of twenty-one vibrant essays by some of the most renowned writers and public intellectuals today combines personal reflections and historical framing of pre-vaccination pandemic America.
A lawyer for the people, Flint Taylor has spent nearly fifty years fighting for justice, from the courtrooms of Cook County to the US Supreme Court.
Writer and actor Wallace Shawn's probing, honest, and self-critical take on civilization and its discontents.
Two years after Hurricane Maria hit, Puerto Ricans are still reeling from its effects and aftereffects. Features writings by prominent Puerto Rican journalists, essayists, and award-winning fiction writers discussing their experiences of documenting, investigating, and making narrative sense of the storm, its aftermath, and the preexisting crisis that conditioned this historic disaster. The book features an interview with Naomi Klein, author of ¿The Battle for Paradise¿
Puerto Rican voices share their stories of surviving Hurricane María and its aftermath.
A much needed investigation of the influence and legacy of Ukraine's revolutionary workers' movement.
Nowhere to Be Home is an eye-opening collection of oral histories exposing the realities of life under military rule. In their own words, men and women from Burma describe their lives in the country that Human Rights Watch has called "the textbook example of a police state."
For more than six decades, Israel and Palestine have been the global focal point of intractable conflict, one that has led to one of the world’s most widely reported yet least understood human rights crises. In their own words, men and women from West Bank and Gaza describe how their lives have been shaped by the conflict. Here are stories that humanize the oft-ignored violations of human rights that occur daily in the occupied Palestinian territories.
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