ifoundtheme's review

Go to review page

A compelling insider history that helped me piece together the legacies of many forms of protest I've experienced

afreema3's review

Go to review page

Read for my course on the American Radical Tradition.

poenaestante's review

Go to review page

4.0

This book was invigorating in a way I did not expect. As a person that has participated in direct action on and off for the last 20 years, it was great to see myself and my peers reflected in this story as part of a legacy of global resistance.

More importantly, it helped me understand the roots of the movements and tactics that I inherited. While I lived the tension between the Bay Area and NYC hip-hop inspired (mostly socialist) POC organizers and the overwhelmingly white anarchists, I didn't know the history and wasn't informed of the efforts my predecessors (like the sisters from Combahee) had made to intervene and confront the white, straight, and male complexion of the many campaigns employing direct action. SO many of the concerns that had long swirled in my mind were validated on the pages of this book.

Direct Action ends on a promising note. With the emergence of the Black Lives Matter movement, those who have long been pushed to the margins in direct action work are again at the center. However, as we all know, after BLM came Standing Rock and then The Women's March and then antifa and now we are looking at the re-emergence of a global climate justice movement with Extinction Rebellion. Will we just backslide into the old ways or will the new formations be truly intersectional? Only time and struggle will tell. But one thing is evident both from the book and my lived experience: much of the work of transforming the world lies in more rigorous and self-reflective prefiguration. See adrienne maree brown's Emergent Strategy for that ;)

gabells's review

Go to review page

5.0

Main takeaways: The US government is built to resist change. They have been infiltrating groups of protesters across all political and human rights groups for a century to sow distrust and spark internal failures of the organizations before they become too effective at affecting change. Also, white people are more likely to initiate violent/highly disruptive direction action because they are less likely to be as targeted/severely brutalized by police. When white men dominated protest/radical culture, BIPOC individuals were consistently not heard or not even considered/left out, and women were constantly being sexually harassed and assaulted at protest events. The intersectional feminist movements led by BIPOC and queer women that have been growing and organizing since the mid 20th century are the most democratic (all voices heard before plans are made) and relationship-building of the radical movements.

mechankily's review

Go to review page

This book is all about the American left. Which is written in the title. But I didn't want to read any more, because there's more to the world than USA, and I don't want to get used to seeing everything through the lens of the USA.

kimberly28's review

Go to review page

5.0

We have to Stan.
I’m for once not adding this to the must read list, but it’s really interesting. This is a history book, and I for one and I think most people (at least younger people who didn’t live through all this) don’t know about many of the direct actions that have gotten us where we are now. I consider myself pretty up on AIDS protesting, but I didn’t know very much about women’s lib, anti nukes, WTO, and other influential movements since the 60’s, and how all their successes and failures introduced intersectionality and new protest methods that are more common now.
It was published in 2017 and of course this is a topic that will always be changing, but I feel like that’s especially true right now with the movement for black lives. It’s not so old that it doesn’t touch on BLM but I’ll have to put a more up to date and specific BLM book on the lefty list.

boithorn's review

Go to review page

5.0

Really stellar history of protest, direct actions, and organizing from the late 60s into the present day. Rather than focusing efforts on tearing down the increasingly futile and local nature of activism that failed to stop the rightward shift in American politics, the book thoughtfully analyzes tactics and strategies in a nearly "objective" way. Triumphs are given equal time with failures, plus the book has numerous examples of radical direct actions that still could be utilized in the here and now.

cosmicllama's review

Go to review page

4.0

A clear well written history of major direct action events within American history since May Day 1971. Kauffman spends a lot of time highlighting the changes movements underwent as they were presented with critiques, and how often racial issues became central to coalition building. While not comprehensive probably in many respects, it does a good job highlighting the most present actions and how they were carried out. Well worth the read if you're unsure of how protests and tactics have changed since the vietnam anti-war protests and why.
More...