Sarah Schulman
All Books By Sarah Schulman
Conflict Is Not Abuse
- By: Sarah Schulman
- Length: 10 hours 47 minutes
- Publisher: Tantor Media, Inc
- Publish date: July 10, 2018
- Language: English
-
3.84(2652 ratings)
From intimate relationships to global politics, Sarah Schulman observes a continuum: that inflated accusations of harm are used to avoid accountability. Illuminating the difference between Conflict and Abuse, Schulman directly addresses our contemporary culture of scapegoating. This deep, brave, and bold work reveals how punishment replaces personal and collective self-criticism, and shows why difference is so often used to justify cruelty and shunning. Rooting the problem of escalation in negative group relationships, Schulman illuminates the ways cliques, communities, families, and religious, racial, and national groups bond through the refusal to change their self-concept. She illustrates how Supremacy behavior and Traumatized behavior resemble each other, through a shared inability to tolerate difference.
This important and sure to be controversial book illuminates such contemporary and historical issues of personal, racial, and geo-political difference as tools of escalation towards injustice, exclusion, and punishment, whether the objects of dehumanization are other individuals in our families or communities, people with HIV, African Americans, or Palestinians.
Let the Record Show
- By: Sarah Schulman
- Narrator: Rosalyn Coleman Williams
- Length: 27 hours 26 minutes
- Publisher: Macmillan Audio
- Publish date: May 18, 2021
- Language: English
-
4.51(756 ratings)
This program includes an introduction read by the author.
One of O, the Oprah Magazine‘s 32 LGBTQ Books That Will Change the Literary Landscape in 2021, one of Vogue‘s 9 LGBTQ+ Books We’re Looking Forward to This Spring, one of and Cosmopolitan‘s LGBTQ+ Books to Add to Your Reading List in 2021, one of The Observer‘s Spring Books You Don’t Want to Miss, and one of Bloomberg‘s 14 Books to Put on Your Reading List This Spring
“A masterpiece of historical research and intellectual analysis that creates many windows into both a vanished world and the one that emerged from it, the one we live in now.” –Alexander Chee
Twenty years in the making, Sarah Schulman’s Let the Record Show is the most comprehensive political history ever assembled of ACT UP and American AIDS activism
In just six years, ACT UP, New York, a broad and unlikely coalition of activists from all races, genders, sexualities, and backgrounds, changed the world. Armed with rancor, desperation, intelligence, and creativity, it took on the AIDS crisis with an indefatigable, ingenious, and multifaceted attack on the corporations, institutions, governments, and individuals who stood in the way of AIDS treatment for all. They stormed the FDA and NIH in Washington, DC, and started needle exchange programs in New York; they took over Grand Central Terminal and fought to change the legal definition of AIDS to include women; they transformed the American insurance industry, weaponized art and advertising to push their agenda, and battled–and beat–The New York Times, the Catholic Church, and the pharmaceutical industry. Their activism, in its complex and intersectional power, transformed the lives of people with AIDS and the bigoted society that had abandoned them.
Based on more than two hundred interviews with ACT UP members and rich with lessons for today’s activists, Let the Record Show is a revelatory exploration–and long-overdue reassessment–of the coalition’s inner workings, conflicts, achievements, and ultimate fracture. Schulman, one of the most revered queer writers and thinkers of her generation, explores the how and the why, examining, with her characteristic rigor and bite, how a group of desperate outcasts changed America forever, and in the process created a livable future for generations of people across the world.
A Macmillan Audio production from Farrar, Straus and Giroux
... Read more