Women's International League for Peace and Freedom Detroit Branch

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Women's International League for Peace and Freedom Detroit Branch Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom Detroit Branch Records 16.5 linear feet (14 SB, 2 OS) 1910s-2000s, bulk 1960-2003 Walter P. Reuther Library, Wayne State University, Detroit, MI Finding aid written by Gavin Strassel on August 14, 2014. Accession Number: UR001870 Creator: Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom Detroit Branch Acquisition: The collection was donated to the Reuther Library by Terry Futvoye- Micus on July 27, 2004 and February 2, 2007. Language: Material entirely in English. Access: Collection is open for research. Use: Refer to the Walter P. Reuther Library Rules for Use of Archival Materials. Restrictions: Researchers may encounter records of a sensitive nature – personnel files, case records and those involving investigations, legal and other private matters. Privacy laws and restrictions imposed by the Library prohibit the use of names and other personal information which might identify an individual, except with written permission from the Director and/or the donor. Notes: Citation style: “Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom Detroit Branch Records, Box [#], Folder [#], Walter P. Reuther Library, Archives of Labor and Urban Affairs, Wayne State University” Related Material: Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom: Meta Riseman Records Audiovisual materials such as audio and video and cassettes were transferred to the Reuther’s Audiovisual Department (see box 16 in the inventory). Two folders of photographic negatives were also transferred to the Audiovisual Department. PLEASE NOTE: Folders in this collection are not necessarily arranged in any particular order. The box folder listing provides an inventory based on their original order. Subjects may be dispersed throughout the collection. Abstract The Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF) is a non-profit, non- governmental organization dedicated to ending war and bringing about world peace. Formed in 1919 along with the Michigan branch, Detroit’s WILPF branch has been active in pushing for peace and equality throughout the region and nationally. These actions reflected in the collection include lobbying politicians (notably Michigan governors, Representative John Dingell, and Detroit mayor Coleman Young), writing publications advocating their positions on various issues, holding public demonstrations for numerous causes, and more. WILPF has continually operated since its formation, but activity and membership spiked in the 1960s in response to the Vietnam War. Noteworthy past members include Meta Riseman (who would go on to serve as the head of WILPF’s US branch), former president Agnes Bryant, and Alice Herz (the first American to commit self-immolation in protest of the war in Vietnam). The Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom Detroit Branch Records contains the records of WILPF’s Detroit chapter with some materials from the Michigan state branch. Much of the collection is comprised of records from meetings for the two chapters and their various subgroups. These reports and meeting minutes reflect the goals and activities of the local WILPF chapters. Other notable sections are the records for WILPF’s Peace Day Camp, compiled materials on prominent local WILPF members, numerous subject files, WILPF publications and pamphlets advocating various issues, planning materials for special events, legislative activities with local and federal politicians, newsletters, and scrapbooks documenting the organization’s history. Important Subjects: Anti-war demonstrations Detroit (Mich.) Nuclear disarmament Peace movements Vietnam War, 1961-1975--Protest movements--United States Women’s Organizations Women’s rights Women’s rights--United States--History--20th Century Important Names: Addams, Jane, 1860-1935 Herz, Helga, 1912-2010 Riseman, Meta Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom Arrangement Folders are listed by their location within each box. They are not necessarily arranged, so any given subject may be dispersed throughout the entire collection. 2 Box 1 1 Women's International League for Peace and Freedom activists, news articles, 1990s (1 of 2) 2 Women's International League for Peace and Freedom activists, news articles, 1990s (2 of 2) 3 Activities, 1970s-1990s (1 of 2) 4 Activities, 1970s-1990s (2 of 2) 5 Event programs, 1970s-1990s (1 of 3) 6 Event programs, 1970s-1990s (2 of 3) 7 Event programs, 1970s-1990s (3 of 3) 8 Solidarity House dinner event, 1975 May 13 9 Activities and events, 1960s-1990s 10 Women's Vote Project, 1984 11 Women's International League for Peace and Freedom events, 1970s-2000s (1 of 3) 12 Women's International League for Peace and Freedom events, 1970s-2000s (2 of 3) 13 Women's International League for Peace and Freedom events, 1970s-2000s (3 of 3) 14 Peace Run, 1999 15 Women's International League for Peace and Freedom Human Rights Action, 1968-1969 16 Challenging Corporate Power, event packet, undated 17 Women's International League for Peace and Freedom Detroit's global activities, undated 18 Cities of Peace Project, event packet, [2000s] 19 Women's Views on Global Security, booklet, 1989 20 Common $ense, poster, [1992] 21 Events and programs, promotional materials and correspondence, 1990s-2000s (1 of 3) 22 Events and programs, promotional materials and correspondence, 1990s-2000s (2 of 3) 23 Events and programs, promotional materials and correspondence, 1990s-2000s (3 of 3) 24 Metropolitan Coalition of Women, 1968-1970 25 Star program, 1982 26 Events, programs and correspondence, 1980s-2000s 27 Human Rights reports, 1980s 28 Human Rights Day, 1960s (1 of 2) 29 Human Rights Day, 1960s (2 of 2) 30 Michigan branch minutes, 1940-1946 31 UNICEF certificates of appreciation, 1966-1980 32 Literature Chairman reports, 1970s 33 WILPF Members in the News vol. III, scrapbook, undated 34 WILPF Members in the News vol. II, scrapbook, undated (1 of 2) 35 WILPF Members in the News vol. II, scrapbook, undated (2 of 2) 36 WILPF newsletters, 1980s-2000s 37 Detroit branch membership meetings, 1978 38 Political leaders, correspondence, 1960s-2000s (1 of 2) 39 Political leaders, correspondence, 1960s-2000s (2 of 2) 40 Corresponding Secretary, 1969 41 Corresponding Secretary, 1967 42 Correspondence, 1980-1985 43 Correspondence, 1990s 44 Corresponding Secretary, 1960-1970s 45 White House, correspondence, 1979 46 Letters of congratulations for diamond jubilee from Detroit leaders, 1979 Box 2 1 Helga Herz, 1990s-2000s 2 Terry Futvage, 1997 3 Meta Riseman, 1950s-1960s 3 4 Jeannette Cleary, 1960s 5 Activists. 1980s-1990s 6 WILPF leadership forms, 1990s-2000s 7 WILPF activities, 1980s-2000s 8 Agnes Bryant, 1990s 9 Treasurer's Reports, 1961-1974 10 Treasurer's Reports, 1988-1994 11 Treasurer's Reports, 1981-1991 12 Treasurer's reports, 1987-1988 13 Financial reports, 1996-2001 14 Newsletters, 1965-1980 15 WILPF Newsletter, newsletter and production materials, 1990s (1 of 4) 16 WILPF Newsletter, newsletter and production materials, 1990s (2 of 4) 17 WILPF Newsletter, newsletter and production materials, 1990s (3 of 4) 18 WILPF Newsletter, newsletter and production materials, 1990s (4 of 4) 19 WILPF Newsletter, newsletter and production materials, 1980s (1 of 4) 20 WILPF Newsletter, newsletter and production materials, 1980s (2 of 4) 21 WILPF Newsletter, newsletter and production materials, 1980s (3 of 4) 22 WILPF Newsletter, newsletter and production materials, 1980s (4 of 4) 23 WILPF Newsletter, 1970s (1 of 4) 24 WILPF Newsletter, 1970s (2 of 4) 25 WILPF Newsletter, 1970s (3 of 4) 26 WILPF Newsletter, 1970s (4 of 4) 27 WILPF Newsletter, 1960s (1 of 2) 28 WILPF Newsletter, 1960s (2 of 2) 29 WIL and WILPF newsletters, 1940s 30 Articles about WILPF, 1990s 31 WILPF annual meetings, 1970s-1990s 32 Events and activities, 1993 33 Meetings and reports, 1992-2002 34 WILPF Detroit activists, 1999-2002 35 Legislative Conference, 1979 36 Legislative activities, 1980 37 Legislative conference, 1980 38 Legislative activities, 1961 39 Legislative activities, 1963-1965 (1 of 2) 40 Legislative activities, 1963-1965 (2 of 2) 41 Report of legislative committee, 1962-1963 42 Legislative workshop, 1963 43 Legislative secretary, correspondence, 1965-1967 (1 of 3) 44 Legislative secretary, correspondence, 1965-1967 (2 of 3) 45 Legislative secretary, correspondence, 1965-1967 (3 of 3) 46 Legislative meeting, 1966 March 47 Michigan Committee on Immigration, 1965 48 January program materials, 1965 49 Office correspondence, 1963 50 Legislative correspondence, 1964 51 Incoming correspondence from legislators, 1968-1969 (1 of 2) 52 Incoming correspondence from legislators, 1968-1969 (2 of 2) 53 Legislative Conference,1966 54 Vietnam War opposition, 1965 55 Correspondence with legislators 1969-1970 4 56 Legislation, 1969-1970 57 Legislative conference, 1971 58 Legislative conference, 1978 Box 3 1 Legislative kit, 1976 April 2 Legislative conference, 1977 3 Legislative conference, 1975 4 Legislative kit, 1975 5 Correspondence between Meta Riseman and legislators, 1973-1974 6 Legislative kit, 1974 7 Legislative conference, 1973 8 Legislative conference, 1972 9 Legislative conference kit, 1972 10 Incoming correspondence from legislators, 1972 11 Legislative conference kit, 1971 12 Legislative conference, 1970 (1 of 2) 13 Legislative conference, 1970 (2 of 2) 14 Fundraising events, 1990s-2000s (1 of 2) 15 Fundraising events, 1990s-2000s (2 of 2) 16 Fundraising notes, 1990s 17 Treasurer's reports, 1946-1952 (1 of 2) 18 Treasurer's reports, 1946-1952 (2 of 2) 19 Treasurer's reports and annual
Recommended publications
  • Issues of the Sixties Inside Pages of the Detroit Fifth Estate, 1965-1970
    TITLE Capturing Detroit Through An Underground Lens: Issues of the Sixties Inside Pages of the Detroit Fifth Estate, 1965-1970. By Harold Bressmer Edsall, III Presented to the American Culture Faculty at the University of Michigan-Flint in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Master of Liberal Studies in American Culture Date March 8, 2010 First Reader Second Reader t Capturing Detroit Through An Underground Lens: Issues of the Sixties Inside Pages of the Detroit Fifth Estate Newspaper, 1965-1970 CONTENTS Introduction 2/5ths In Every Garage 2 Chapter 1 Life in the Fourth Estate: Someone Had to Testify 12 Chapter 2 Origins of The Fifth Estate : Hard to Miss The 55 Black and White Coalition Chapter 3 Antiwar News: The Fifth Estate “A Peddler of 89 Smut” Chapter 4 The Fifth Estate , The Underground Press Syndicate, 126 And Countercultural Revenues Chapter 5 Time, Life, Luce, LBJ, LSD, and theFifth Estate 163 APPENDIX Distortion of an UM-Flint Graduate 200 BIBLIOGRAPHY 207 2 Introduction: 2/5ths In Every Garage 3 In December 1968 editors of the Detroit Fifth Estate (FE ), what was referred to as an “underground newspaper,” shared with its readers that “A girl wrote us from Britton, Mich, and told us that she had been caught selling papers to Adrian College students and got busted by her high school principal.”1 The authorities threatened the young lady with criminal charges for selling “pornographic literature, contributing to the delinquency of minors, and selling without a permit.”2 FE stated, “This goes on all the time, but it won’t turn us around.
    [Show full text]
  • Protest by Fire: Essay on a Paroxysmal Element
    Protest by Fire: Essay on a Paroxysmal Element By Richard A. Hughes M.B. Rich Professor of Religion Lycoming College 700 College Place Williamsport, PA 17701−5192 USA 1 Introduction In his book The Psychoanalysis of Fire Gaston Bachelard presents a theory of fire as a fundamental element. He points out that life accounts for all slow changes, but fire creates quick changes. Fire “rises from the depths of the substance and offers itself with the warmth of love. Or it can go back down into the substance and hide there, latent and pent-up, like hate and vengeance” (Bachelard 1964: 7). In the same context Bachelard observes that fire is the only element to which “the opposing values of good and evil” may be attributed. “It shines in Paradise. It burns in hell. It is gentleness and torture. It is cookery and it is apocalypse.” Bachelard goes on to explain that fire has a sexual nature. From the age of prehistoric societies to the present sexual intimacy has been the model for the objective production of fire. Rubbing two pieces of wood together to start a fire would be analogous to the rubbing together in the sexual act (Bachelard 1964: 23−24). He collects examples of the rubbing together analogy in Germanic, Scottish, and Native American rituals. Bachelard believes that since ancient times fire has been a sexual element as expressed in dreams, symbols, and moral values. Bachelard’s provocative study betrays an ambiguity between the sexual nature of fire and moral values. In this paper I contend that fire as a symbol pertains psychologically to moral experience rather than to sexuality.
    [Show full text]
  • Newsletter 2019 First Unitarian-Universalist Church Edition of Detroit
    February Newsletter 2019 First Unitarian-Universalist Church Edition of Detroit Upcoming Sermon Schedule February 3rd — “On Henry Louis Gates, Jr.” The Rev. Dr. Stephen Butler Murray, Minister One of the most important historians and interpreters of African American lives is Dr. Henry Louis Gates, Jr., the Alphonse Fletcher University Professor and Director of the Hutchins Center for African and African American Research at Harvard University and host of the beloved PBS series Finding Your Roots. Today, we will 4605 Cass Ave. explore the biography and legacy of Gates’s public intellectual work. Detroit, MI 48201 313-833-9107 th February 10 — “The Promise and the Practice: Unitarian Universalism’s Black www.1stuu.org History” The Rev. Dr. Stephen Butler Murray, Minister Vision: First Unitarian-Universalist Church is an urban center in Detroit Today’s service will explore the history of African Americans in the Unitarian for spiritual renewal and social Universalist movement, from 1860 to the present. justice. Mission: First Unitarian-Universalist th February 17 — “Immolation and Identity” Church strives to be an expanding The Rev. Dr. Stephen Butler Murray, Minister transformative community whose One of the moral quandaries of the Vietnam War era concerned the Buddhist monks mission is to liberate truth, radiate who immolated themselves in protest of the war. The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. kindness, and love courageously. and the Vietnamese monk Thich Nhat Hanh corresponded with each other on this We are a Welcoming Congregation issue, providing a rich Christian-Buddhist dialogue on the comparative religious ethics We believe Black Lives Matter concerning this topic.
    [Show full text]
  • 1 This Is a Pre-Copyedited, Author-Produced Version of An
    This is a pre-copyedited, author-produced version of an article accepted for publication in Forum for Modern Language Studies following peer review. Publication is forthcoming and URL and DOI are to follow. “Burn, Baby! Burn!”: Paris, Watts, Brussels, Berlin and Vietnam in the Work of Kommune I, 1967 ABSTRACT This study explores through close reading the best-known works of West Berlin’s subversive group Kommune I (KI), four flyers which triggered a prosecution for incitement to arson in 1967. These flyers allude to a recent, catastrophic fire in a department store in Brussels in order to comment satirically on the Vietnam conflict. This reading refers to the work of the Situationist International (SI) and Guy Debord, highlighting correspondences between the thought and practice of the SI and KI’s flyers. Mobilising some of the SI’s key concepts, like the spectacle and détournement, this study considers how KI’s flyers exploit and challenge some of the era’s most significant discourses about Vietnam, from both the political mainstream and the anti-war movement, at times moving them onto new, unsettling ground. The essay thus contributes to an analysis of the ways in which KI achieved its profoundly disturbing effects. KEYWORDS West Germany – anti-authoritarianism – Vietnam War – Kommune I (KI) – Situationist International (SI) – flyers – representation – détournement – spectacle – fire 1 “Burn, Baby! Burn!”: Paris, Watts, Brussels, Berlin and Vietnam in the Work of Kommune I, 1967 Introduction For some two years in the late 1960s, the
    [Show full text]
  • The History and Memory of 'Women Strike for Peace', 1961-1990
    Northumbria Research Link Citation: Coburn, Jon (2015) Making a Difference: The History and Memory of ‘Women Strike for Peace’, 1961-1990. Doctoral thesis, Northumbria University. This version was downloaded from Northumbria Research Link: http://nrl.northumbria.ac.uk/id/eprint/30339/ Northumbria University has developed Northumbria Research Link (NRL) to enable users to access the University’s research output. Copyright © and moral rights for items on NRL are retained by the individual author(s) and/or other copyright owners. Single copies of full items can be reproduced, displayed or performed, and given to third parties in any format or medium for personal research or study, educational, or not-for-profit purposes without prior permission or charge, provided the authors, title and full bibliographic details are given, as well as a hyperlink and/or URL to the original metadata page. The content must not be changed in any way. Full items must not be sold commercially in any format or medium without formal permission of the copyright holder. The full policy is available online: http://nrl.northumbria.ac.uk/policies.html Making a Difference: The History and Memory of ‘Women Strike for Peace’, 1961-1990 Jon Coburn PhD 2015 Making a Difference: The History and Memory of ‘Women Strike for Peace’, 1961-1990 Jon Coburn A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the University of Northumbria at Newcastle for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Research undertaken in the Faculty of Arts, Design and Social Sciences December 2015 Abstract The women’s antinuclear protest group Women Strike for Peace (WSP) formed a visible part of the US peace movement during the Cold War, recording several successes and receiving a positive historical assessment for its maternal, respectable image.
    [Show full text]
  • Unitarian-Universalist Church 4605 Cass at Forest Detroit, MI 48201
    Sat., 4/16/2016 UNITARIANS AND UNIVERSALISTS IN DETROIT Sat., 4/16/2016 First Unitarian-Universalist Church 4605 Cass at Forest Detroit, MI 48201 www.1stuu.org Centennial Celebration of our Sanctuary April 16-17, 1916 April 16-17, 2016 Centennial Celebration - First UU Detroit Sat., 4/16/2016 WELCOME! We’re delighted We’re going to trace you’ve joined us our Unitarian and (either in person or Universalist roots back by reading this tour 185 years – to the booklet) to look 1830s – when free back at how thinkers first began to Unitarians and dream of a liberal Universalists came to religious Detroit and how we denomination in made our way to the Detroit corner of Cass and Forest, together Centennial Celebration - First UU Detroit 3 Sat., 4/16/2016 WHO, WHICH, WHAT, WHY? WHERE, HOW? Who organized first, the Where did civil rights Unitarians or the martyrs, ground-breaking Universalists? African-Americans, icons of Which major figures in women’s and workers’ Detroit's early history were rights movements, involved in the founding politicians, poets and and leadership of our peace activists worship, liberal churches? meet and organize? What locations did they How long have we actively choose? Why? supported the LGBTQ community? FASTEN YOUR SEAT BELTS, HERE WE GO! Centennial Celebration - First UU Detroit 4 Detroit - 1831 Sat., 4/16/2016 Centennial Celebration - First UU Detroit 5 Sat.,1830s 4/16/2016 1831: Universalists purchase a building [NW corner of Bates and Michigan Grand Ave – now Cadillac Square] 1833: Unitarians hold their first service at the Courtroom of the Capitol [now Capitol Park] 1836: Universalist circuit- riders preach at City Hall [east of Woodward in the middle of “Michigan Grand Ave”] * 1836-38: Unitarian “missionaries” visit Michigan Centennial Celebration - First UU Detroit 6 6 Sat., 4/16/2016 WHO WAS FIRST? 1831 1833 John Farrar, and two Rev.
    [Show full text]
  • ABSTRACT BROADHURST, CHRISTOPHER JAMES. the Silent
    ABSTRACT BROADHURST, CHRISTOPHER JAMES. The Silent Campus Speaks: North Carolina State University and the National Student Protest, May 1970. (Under the direction of Paul Umbach). May 1970 became a pivotal moment in higher education. In that month, the backlash over two events, the announcement of the American invasion of Cambodia and the National Guard killing four Kent State University students protesting that military offensive, triggered the largest student protest in history. Across the nation, hundreds of thousands of students protested on hundreds of campuses. The scale of the reactions shocked America. This work explores the development of a student protest subculture at North Carolina State University and connects the campus’s outburst of student activism to the national student protests of May 1970. The images from campuses such as Berkeley, Wisconsin, or Columbia during the late 1960s has helped propagate the myth that student activism dominated college life in the period. While some campuses, particularly elite universities, did possess active protest cultures, many of the nation’s colleges and universities leaned more toward conservatism. Yet even on these conservative campuses, as the 60s progressed, student activism began to gain a stronger presence. Students increasingly voiced their concerns over national issues, such as civil rights or the Vietnam War, and challenged long-standing doctrines of in loco parentis. By placing one campus, North Carolina State University, within the broader national context, this research
    [Show full text]
  • Conservatives and the End of the Draft
    Pittsburg State University Pittsburg State University Digital Commons Electronic Thesis Collection 5-7-2015 Conservatives and the End of the Draft Shad Ashcroft Pittsburg State University Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.pittstate.edu/etd Part of the History Commons, and the International Relations Commons Recommended Citation Ashcroft, Shad, "Conservatives and the End of the Draft" (2015). Electronic Thesis Collection. 31. https://digitalcommons.pittstate.edu/etd/31 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by Pittsburg State University Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Electronic Thesis Collection by an authorized administrator of Pittsburg State University Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. CONSERVATIVES AND THE END OF THE DRAFT A THESIS SUBMITTED TO THE GRADUATE SCHOOL IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS SHAD ASHCROFT PITTSBURG STATE UNIVERSITY PITTSBURG, KANSAS MAY 7, 2015 CONSERVATIVES AND THE END OF THE DRAFT SHAD ASHCROFT APPROVED: Thesis Advisor: ______________________________________________________ Dr. John L.S. DaLey, Professor, History, Philosophy and SociaL Sciences Committee Member: ______________________________________________________ Dr. Kirstin L. Lawson, Assistant Professor, History, Philosophy and Social Sciences Committee Member: ______________________________________________________ Dr. Mark Peterson, Assistant Professor, History, PhiLosoPhy, and Social Sciences CONSERVATIVES AND THE END OF THE DRAFT An Abstract of the Thesis by Shad Ashcroft WhiLe conservatives of aLL striPes generaLLy suPPorted the Vietnam War, particularly at its onset, I wilL show that the debate to end conscription reveaLs a rift between traditional conservatives who supported the draft and libertarian conservatives who oPPosed it (whiLe generaLLy suPPorting the war).
    [Show full text]
  • Responses to Political Self-Immolation in the West
    Sprague 1 Matt Sprague Prof. Chang MMW 12 [A00] May 27 2020 Spreading Flame: Responses to Political Self-Immolation in the West The self-burning of Vietnamese Buddhist monks in 1963 is somehow difficult for Western Christian conscience to understand. The press spoke then of suicide, but in the essence, it is not. It is not even a protest. What the monks said in the letters they left before burning themselves aimed only at alarming, at moving the hearts of the oppressors, and at calling the attention of the world to the suffering endured then by the Vietnamese. To burn oneself by fire is to prove that what one is saying is of the utmost importance. - Thich Nhat Hanh, “In Search of the Enemy of Man” Self-immolation as a practice has its roots in various religious and cultural traditions but was rarely under the purview of Western civilization until it exploded onto the stage in 1963. The self-immolation accredited with beginning a wave of similar incidents was that of Thich Quang Duc, a Vietnamese Buddhist monk who burned himself publicly to bring awareness to ongoing religious persecution (Crosby, 60). Images of Quang Duc sitting calmly in flames, defying his own intense bodily pain, have become enduring symbols of opposition to the forces of oppression. Although some Eastern societies employed self-immolation, most notably through various examples of widow-burning and Buddhist devotional burnings (Crosby, 61), there was no significant history of burning oneself in Western culture. This misunderstanding prompted Thich Nhat Hanh’s letter to Martin Luther King, Jr.
    [Show full text]
  • Martyrdom in the Modern Middle East
    Martyrdom in the Modern Middle East Sasha Dehghani – Silvia Horsch (Eds.) EX ORIENTE LUX REZEPTIONEN UND EXEGESEN ALS TRADITIONSKRITIK herausgegeben von Eli Bar-Chen Almut Sh. Bruckstein Navid Kermani Angelika Neuwirth Andreas Pflitsch Martin Tamcke Schriftenreihe des Projekts „Islamische und jüdische Hermeneutik als Kulturkritik / Islamic and Jewish Hermeneutics as Cultural Critique“, Arbeitskreis Moderne und Islam am Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin BAND 14 ERGON VERLAG Martyrdom in the Modern Middle East Sasha Dehghani – Silvia Horsch (Eds.) ERGON VERLAG Die Drucklegung dieses Bandes wurde vom Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung unter dem Förderkennzeichen 01UG0712 unterstützt, die Verantwortung für die Inhalte tragen die Autoren. Bibliografische Information der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek Die Deutsche Nationalbibliothek verzeichnet diese Publikation in der Deutschen Nationalbibliografie; detaillierte bibliografische Daten sind im Internet über http://dnb.d-nb.de abrufbar. Bibliographic information published by the Deutsche Nationalbibliothek The Deutsche Nationalbibliothek lists this publication in the Deutsche Nationalbibliografie; detailed bibliographic data are available in the Internet at http://dnb.dnb.de. 2014 Ergon-Verlag GmbH · 97074 Würzburg Das Werk einschließlich aller seiner Teile ist urheberrechtlich geschützt. Jede Verwertung außerhalb des Urheberrechtsgesetzes bedarf der Zustimmung des Verlages. Das gilt insbesondere für Vervielfältigungen jeder Art, Übersetzungen, Mikroverfilmungen und für Einspeicherungen in
    [Show full text]
  • Swarthmore College Peace Collection Project
    Recordings at Risk Sample Proposal (Second Call) Applicant: Swarthmore College Peace Collection Project: Debating the Vietnam War: Film and Audio Recordings from the 1960s and 1970s Portions of this successful proposal have been provided for the benefit of future Recordings at Risk applicants. Members of CLIR’s independent review panel were particularly impressed by these aspects of the proposal: ● The application has a very thorough technical approach and digital preservation plan which cover storage of multiple copies, data integrity (fixity) checks, format migration, and metadata creation. ● The applicant has put a lot of effort into providing wide access to the digital files (Internet Archive, DPLA, MARC records in College’s publicly available catalog). Note: Sections of sample proposals have been redacted if sensitive information has been identified (e.g., staff salaries). Please direct any questions to program staff at [email protected]. ​ ​ SwarthmoreCollegePeaceCollection 1/13 User: Section 1. Project Summary Institution/Organization Swarthmore College Peace Collection Project Title Debating the Vietnam War: Film and Audio Recordings from the 1960s and 1970s Project summary This project will digitize 144 open reel-to-reel, magnet tapes and 52 motion picture films from speeches, conferences, films and other programs which included public figures who spoke out to end the Vietnam War in the 1960s and 1970s. The metadata records in the Peace Collection, for these recordings will be extended to meet current standards. These recordings, which are unique, will be made available to the general public, via the Internet Archives and the Peace Collection web site. The voices and images of Vietnam Veterans, anti-war activists, business leaders, religious leaders, civil rights leaders, women peace activists, entertainers, U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • Peace Movements and Religion in the U.S
    PEACE MOVEMENTS AND RELIGION IN THE UNITED STATES • 91 PEACE MOVEMENTS AND the purpose of demonstrating the ways in RELIGION IN THE UNITED which religious resources and faith have STATES mobilized citizens to resist war, challenge im­ perial aspirations, and promote nonviolent forms of conflict transformation. PEACE MOVEMENT ISSUES AND ACTIONS NUCLEAR WEAPONS AND There is a long and rich history of religious DISARMAMENT MOVEMENTS peace movements in the United States. These movements have addressed issues of military Although religious groups had mobilized for conscription, the nuclear arms race, bellicose the cause of peace before World War II, the policies toward other nations, and a variety advent of the nuclear era was transformative. of social justice issues. While there have been The United States demonstrated that it had hundreds of religious peace groups in the the most destructive military capacity of any United States, in this article I survey and high­ nation when it dropped atomic bombs on light ten. I categorize these movements around Hiroshima, Japan, on August 6, 1945, and three the issues of nuclear weapons and disarma­ days later on Nagasaki. Over 100,000 people ment, the Vietnam War, low­intensity warfare were killed instantly, and tens of thousands in Central America, and nonviolent interven­ died over the subsequent months. Others suf­ tion in conflict zones. I selected these ten fered long­term effects from massive radiation movements for the following three reasons. exposure—this included malignant tumors, First, all focused primarily on nonviolent direct various forms of cancer, ophthalmological dis­ action rather than educational endeavors or orders, neurological disorders, and birth consciousness­raising.
    [Show full text]