Howard Zinn [videorecording] : you can't be neutral on a moving train / a First Run Features presentation ; a documentary by Deb Ellis and Denis Mueller.

Contributor(s): Material type: FilmPublisher number: FRF911320D | First-Run FeaturesPublication details: New York, N.Y. : First-Run Features, 2004.Description: 1 videodisc (78 min.) : sd., col. with b&w sequences ; 4 3/4 inOther title:
  • You can't be neutral on a moving train
Subject(s): Genre/Form:
Contents:
Introduction -- Early life -- Power of labor -- Roz -- Royan -- Early married life -- Ludlow Massacre -- South -- Dunkin Donuts -- New Abolitionists -- Vietnam -- Logic of Withdrawal -- Role of the historian -- Civil disobedience -- Zinn and Silber -- People's History -- Marx in Soho -- War is like crack -- Democracy -- Credits.
Production credits:
  • Music composed by Richard Martinez.
Howard Zinn; interviewees include Oscar Chase, Alice Walker, Marian Wright Edelman, Noam Chomsky, Staughton Lynd, Cleveland Sellers, Bob Moses, Clayborne Carson, Tom Hayden, Stanley Kutler, Daniel Ellsberg, Dan Berrigan, Jay Craven, Ray Mungo, Francis Fox Piven, Elsa Misson; narration, Matt Damon.Summary: Historian, activist, and author Howard Zinn loves his country. This does not mean he refrains from reproaching it for its crimes; such reproach is one of the spurs to it doing better one day soon. To that end, Zinn became an academic. However, as the child of poor, working-class parents, Zinn has also been a blue-collar dockworker and labor organizer, a decorated WW2 bombardier, an adviser to the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee and leader of the peace movement at Boston University in the 1960s. Zinn is the rare historian who's been brave enough to participate in the making of history, and this film finds him returning to the role of anti-war activist in post 9/11 America, asserting the value of nonviolent civil disobedience, and the need for ''people's movements'' to effect social change.
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Item type Current library Call number Status Barcode
Book Storms Research Center Main Collection DVD E 175.5 .Z56 H69 2004 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 98639206

DVD.

Howard Zinn; interviewees include Oscar Chase, Alice Walker, Marian Wright Edelman, Noam Chomsky, Staughton Lynd, Cleveland Sellers, Bob Moses, Clayborne Carson, Tom Hayden, Stanley Kutler, Daniel Ellsberg, Dan Berrigan, Jay Craven, Ray Mungo, Francis Fox Piven, Elsa Misson; narration, Matt Damon.

Music composed by Richard Martinez.

Originally released as a motion picture in 2004.

Historian, activist, and author Howard Zinn loves his country. This does not mean he refrains from reproaching it for its crimes; such reproach is one of the spurs to it doing better one day soon. To that end, Zinn became an academic. However, as the child of poor, working-class parents, Zinn has also been a blue-collar dockworker and labor organizer, a decorated WW2 bombardier, an adviser to the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee and leader of the peace movement at Boston University in the 1960s. Zinn is the rare historian who's been brave enough to participate in the making of history, and this film finds him returning to the role of anti-war activist in post 9/11 America, asserting the value of nonviolent civil disobedience, and the need for ''people's movements'' to effect social change.

Introduction -- Early life -- Power of labor -- Roz -- Royan -- Early married life -- Ludlow Massacre -- South -- Dunkin Donuts -- New Abolitionists -- Vietnam -- Logic of Withdrawal -- Role of the historian -- Civil disobedience -- Zinn and Silber -- People's History -- Marx in Soho -- War is like crack -- Democracy -- Credits.

Special features: Biographies: Filmmakers Deb Ellis and Denis Mueller [text feature]; Human nature and aggression (9 min.); Speech at Veterans for Peace Conference 2004 (16 min.); 1971 Speech at Boston Common of (sic?) civil disobedience (12 min.) [Audio-only feature]; trailer gallery; DVD-ROM features: Howard Zinn biography; Recommended reading list; Transcription of the Boston Common audio speech [PDF files require a DVD-ROM drive and Adobe Acrobat]; About First Run Features [text feature].

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