Dissent in America: Voices That Shaped a Nation
Ralph F. Young. Longman Publishing Group, $35 (792pp) ISBN 978-0-321-44297-0
Taking up Martin Luther King, Jr.'s definition of dissent-""the right to protest for right""-Temple University historian Young culls 400 years worth of texts that exercise that right with fire and flair. Anne Hutchinson, Henry David Thoreau, Martin Luther King Jr., Ani DiFranco and Cindy Sheehan all appear, alongside lesser-known figures like Native American Stung Serpent (writing in 1723) and Lucy Stone (who circulated her ""Statement on Marriage"" in 1855). Divided chronologically, the anthology collects essays, speeches, organizational statements, songs, posters, interviews, broadsides and texts in other media. Most of those voices come from the left of the political spectrum, but Father Coughlin, The Michigan Militia and others are also here. Susan B. Anthony advises earnest dissenters to ""avow their sympathy with despised and persecuted ideas and their advocates, and bear the consequences."" For readers with something on their minds, 400 years of precedent may be just what they need to stimulate some questions of their own. B&W illustrations.
Details
Reviewed on: 06/22/2009
Genre: Nonfiction
Paperback - 490 pages - 978-0-205-60541-5