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angela davis
by Alex Burns (alex@disinfo.com) - March 04, 2001
Born on January 26, 1944, in Birmingham, Alabama, radical black activist, author and academic Angela Davis received a B.A. from Brandeis University in 1965. She later studied as a doctoral candidate at the University of California, San Diego, under the Marxist professor and One Dimensional Man'(1964) author Herbert Marcuse.

Davis joined the Communist Party in 1968 and suffered discrimination like many blacks during the late 1960s for her personal political beliefs and commitment to revolutionary ideals. Despite her qualifications and excellent teaching record, the California Board of Regents refused to renew her appointment as a philosophy lecturer in 1970.

Davis worked to free the Soledad (Prison) Brothers, African-American prisoners held in California during the late 1960s. She befriended George Jackson, one of the prisoners. On August 7, 1970, during an abortive escape and kidnap attempt from Marin County's Hall of Justice, the trial judge and three people were killed, including Jackson's brother Jonathan. Although not at the crime scene, Davis was implicated when police claimed that the guns used had been registered in her name.

Davis fled underground and was consequently listed on the FBI's Top 10 Most Wanted Criminals list, sparking one of the most intensive manhunts in recent American history. Californian Governor Ronald Reagan publicly vowed that Davis would never teach in that state again. She was captured in New York City in August 1970, but was freed eighteen months later and cleared of all charges in 1972 by an all white jury. During this period an international Free Angela Davis movement had grown, and Davis used the momentum to found the National Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression, which remains active today.

Davis resumed teaching at San Francisco State University after the fiasco, and has subsequently lectured in all 50 US states, as well as internationally throughout Europe, Africa, the Carribean, Russia and the Pacific. Her acclaimed books exploring the institutionalisation of racial politics include If They Come In The Morning (1971), Angela Davis: An Autobiography (1974), Women, Race & Class (1981), Women, Race and Politics (1989), Blues Legacies & Black Feminism (1999) and The Angela Y Davis Reader (1999).

Currently a member of the Advisory Board of the Prison Activist Resource Center, Davis now focuses on exposing racism that is endemic to the US prison system (which she calls the Punishment Industry in deference to unmonitored corporate cult-ure and increasingly totalitarian privatization schemes), and exploring new ways to de-construct oppression and race hatred. Controversy and her radical past still haunts her: in 1994 Republicans objected to her appointment to a presidential chair at University of California, Santa Cruz, where she is currently a professor in the History of Consciousness Department.

Her revolutionary politics and academic writings provide a link from 1960s groups like the Black Panthers to contemporary cases including Leonard Peltier and Mumia Abu Jamal. Ultimately Davis represents a revitalising force in New Left politics (she was at the forefront of Gulf War protests in the United States that were censored by the mainstream media) and individual life-affirming cultural studies (particularly blues and hip-hop music). She remains a powerful role-model for the Black Consciousness movement, and a reminder of how dictatorial the Police State can suddenly become towards minorities if it is not vigilantly monitored by free patriots.

 
 
more information  
 

Angela Davis 1970 Interview
Interview with Angela Davis from 1970 on Black Consciousness and America's revolutionary tradition. Clearly anticipates the famous court case. RealAudio.

Angela Davis
Angela Davis testimony promoting the Committees of Correspondence, a forum for U.S. radical politics.

50 Years of Radio and Vision: Angela Davis
Pacifica Radio brings you a compelling audio interview with Angela Davis, focusing on black consciousness and the criminal justice system. RealAudio.

The Two Nations of Black Africa: An Interview with Angela Davis
Excellent 1997 PBS interview with Angela Davis focuses on her contemporary activism (Leonard Peltier, Mumia Abu-Jamal); Martin Luther King; hip-hip icons and cultural politics; mentor Herbert Marcuse and more. Intelligent and provocative.

Understanding the Attack on Affirmative Action
Text of a June 25, 1998 ,speech by Angela Davis on Affirmative Action that also conveys her contemporary interpretation of the 1960s activist legacy: "I also need to point out that we are not in the '60s anymore . . . As much as we should praise these achievements, we also have a to realize that times have changed. For example, we can no longer talk only about racial discrimination; we also have to look at the connection with gender discrimination."

The Punishment Industry And The Laughing Corporate Culture
This coverage of an Angela Davis speech conveys many of her key thoughts on the Prison Industry, and its links with corporate culture and privatization.

Revolutionary Judo Magazine
The legacy of the Black Panthers and Angela Davis lives on in this engrossing publication: "Within the illusion of the internet, we find real allies - familiar stories falling through machinery. A weed tufts in the sidewalk crack. Revolutionary Judo. Using the tools of the enemy against itself. Revolutionary Judo. The knowledge and skill to make size and stupidity fatal. De-colonized. Re-visionary. Communion in the blinding lights."

Angela Davis Leads Off UH Lecture Series
Press release for a Feb 12, 1998, Angela Davis at University of Hawaii, including a brief bio and recent academic publication history.

The Black Scholar
Details and sample online issues of The Black Scholar: Journal of Black Studies and Research. Authoritative and vital information.

The Cover Phoenix Magazine
Describing itself as "the e-magazine that looks at the written and oral use of words in the black world," The Cover Phoenix represents a compelling example of how Angela Davis's revolutionary politics have mutated into vibrant new forms within the cultural sphere. Valuable reading!

Jails Are Trickery: Ex-Black Panther
This Sydney Morning Herald article (May 24, 1999), covers Angela Davis's 1999 speaking tour, focusing on the Prison-Industrial Complex. Requires free registration.

Angela
Coverage of the arrest of Angela Davis on false charges by the FBI after being linked to Jonathan Jackson's Marin County courthouse incident.

The World Watches Angela
Interview with Fania Jordan (Angela Davis' sister) during the trial: "Angela Davis is not just one person called Angela Davis: she is a symbol. She is not just a problem of the United States; her murder would be a threat to the whole of humanity; thus it is the responsibility of us all, of the entire world, to save her."

Angela Davis Knows about Prison From Both Sides of the Bars
Coverage of Angela Davis' 1999 stint holding mock-court in Cumberland School of Law at Samford University, Alabama's most conservative law school.

Center for Campus Organizing: Political Prisoners
Useful essay, bibliography and organizations contact list regarding Angela Davis, Mumia Abu-Jamal, Leonard Peltier and other black activists and political prisoners.

A Place of Rage
Critical review of A Place Of Rage (1991), an excellent documentary on the strange life and activist exploits of Angela Davis.

African American Women In The Civil Rights Movement: A Bibliography
Indepth list of scholarly resources for exploring the context and background to Angela Davis's revolutionary politics. For the serious researcher.

Angela Davis and The Jim Grant Case
Historical photo of activist Angela Davis with Jim Grant's parents. Grant had been falsely accused of arson.

Who is Left?
"Everybody agrees there is a Right in American politics and everybody thinks they can name the players. We think it is time to take a balanced view of the political process and identify the political Left."

Angela Davis
Short bio of Angela Davis from a Black Panthers history site.

Freedom for Angela Davis
1976 poster championing Angela Davis, the Black Panthers and Puerto Rican autonomy.

Davis Inspires Students to Reflect on Agenda
Angela Davis analysed from a Gen-X perspective: "There is the problem of too many African-Americans in the prison system. As stated by Davis, this problem is a result of racism. Then there are the members of Generation X who are not protesting because they fail to see the problem."

Angela Yvonne Davis
Brief encyclopedia bio of Angela Davis.

Caslifornia Newsreel: Black Is . . .Black Ain't
Details of the final film by documentary filmmaker Marlon Riggs, focusing on explosive debates about black identity. The film includes commentary by Angela Davis.

Cosmic Baseball Association: Angela Davis
Angela Davis details from the unique Cosmic Baseball Association site.

Review: Race and Unreason
Details of Anna Deavere Smith's play Fires in the Mirror, which uses the August 1991 Crown Heights incident as the starting point for a poignant examination of black consciousness and race-hatred. Angela Davis features as a character in the play.

Angela Davis
Brief Angela Davis bio and early photo.

Angela Davis: Biography On Writing & Resistance
This brief bio features details of Angela Davis's writings not found in others.

Angela Davis
Brief Angela Davis bio from Infoplease.com.

'60s Radical Angela Davis to Visit Campus Oct. 16
University of Connecticut press release for an Oct 16, 1997, speaking engagement. Ronald Taylor, staff-member: "She is one of the most eloquent spokespersons today with respect to political matters . . . She has an ability to identify the factors in this country that contribute to social problems of one kind or another, whether we are talking about the number of people that end up in prison, or the conditions that perpetuate racial and gender inequality in this country."

Speak Out: Angela Davis
Brief Angela Davis bio for leading speaker's agency.

The Real Angela Davis
Historical commentaries posted by the Organization for the Truth About Angela Davis, attacking her post-prison activities and calls for world revolution. Political rants and disinformation at its finest.

Kevin Hellon: Angela Davis
Artist Kevin Hellon has portraits of Angela Davis for sale . . .

Angela Davis
A seminal early Angela Davis quote.

 
 


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