“The People Speak” A Tribute to Howard Zinn

Monday, September 19, 2022 - 1:00pm
CDT
FILM & DISCUSSION

This is the 100th anniversary of the birth of Howard Zinn. We honor his contribution to the remaking of our understanding of the importance of the common man in the making of history by screening his film “The People Speak.” Zinn celebrated the struggles for justice of common men and women, their protests against injustice, our social movements for change. He understood that these struggles outside the established political institutions are the lifeblood of democracy. Democracy is in the streets, not in the halls of Congress where the powerful operate. It is the counter power of the People that makes our country sometimes democratic.

Howard Zinn saw the history of the U.S. as a people’s history and in that pointed to a very different concept of democracy from the one promoted by the powerful. In their narrative the essence of democracy is found in contested elections and in the deliberations among the representatives chosen thereby. The role of the people is to choose from among a political elite who is to rule them; the role of elections is simply to produce a government. Once this is done, we have discharged our civic responsibility as citizens and we are expected to return to the affairs of our private lives. Political scientists call this representationism by the term polyarchy. It is essentially an elitist theory of democracy, a kind of low intensity democracy at best.

Against this, Zinn advocated a participatory democracy in keeping with the original meaning of the Greek word -- the rule or power, cratos, of the people, demos. Democracy means people’s power. Throughout our history there have been periodic democratic moments when the power of the people has found voice. The labor movement of the 1930s and the civil rights and anti-war movements of the 1960s come to mind as high points of democracy in our lifetime. Those decades of heightened political participation, social protest and citizen engagement in public affairs were among the democratic moments in our history. Social movements made demands on the ruling elites, demands for economic empowerment, for racial equality, for peace, for social justice, demands that the institutions of government address pressing social problems.

This sensibility is expressed in the readings presented in this film from Frederick Douglass, Susan B. Anthony, Bob Dylan, Langston Hughes and others.

 

UPCOMING TOURS

June 15, 2025 to June 25, 2025
Join us in an exciting visit to Cuba--a country committed to building socialism. We will learn about Cuba’s stunning accomplishments such as free health care and education, its collective production in agricultural and urban cooperatives, We will dialogue with leading thinkers about their visions... Read more
April 7, 2025 to April 11, 2025
Join us for an amazing trip to the old mining town of Zacatecas which was founded in 1546 after the discovery of silver deposits in the area by 4 Spaniards who risked their lives looking for gold, but instead ended up finding silver. This remote territory was inhabited by indigenous Zacateco... Read more

Upcoming Forums & Films

Monday, March 10, 2025 - 1:00pm
CST
Laura Carlsen
Location:
Join in person at the Hotel Quinta Loreto Community Room

Laura Carlsen is the Director of the Meixco City-based international relations think tank, Mira: Feminisms and Democracies, and Coordinator of Political Analysis and Global Solidarity with Just Associates. She holds an interdisciplinary degree in Women’s Studies and a Masters in Latin American Studies, both from Stanford University. A dual... Read more

Monday, March 17, 2025 - 1:00pm
CST
Harry Targ
Location:
Join in person at the Hotel Quinta Loreto Community Room

Behind the turmoil of the Ukraine and Israeli wars, tensions between the United States and China, African contestation over neo-colonial political, economic, and military influence, and US meddling in the politics of Latin America, there are fundamental forces in play that seek to rearrange and change the architectures of global social... Read more