Peace Now! Great American Pacifists
First episode of the new podcast, which will devote an episode each to figures such as Lucretia Mott, William Lloyd Garrison, Dorothy Day, Bayard Rustin, and Judith Butler.
Episodes
20 episodes
The Profound Ethics of Non-Violence in Judith Butler
One of the most important living intellectual figures, Judith Butler has, in this century, developed a very profound and original pacifist ethics. I kept using 'she' pronouns right until the end when I suddenly realized it should be...
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Season 1
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Episode 20
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31:39
Practical Pacifism (and the Arab Spring): Gene Sharp
Sharp's work on practical ways to transform totalitarian systems non-violently has proven important to resistance movements all over the world, including in the color revolutions and the Arab Spring, in Myanmar and Serbia and elsewhere. His yea...
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Season 1
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Episode 19
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32:11
Daniel and Philip Berrigan: The Spiritual Poetry and Prose of Non-Violence
The astonishing Berrigan brothers, Roman Catholic priests and peace activists of total commitment.
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Season 1
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Episode 18
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28:02
Effective Spirituality: the Great Cesar Chavez
A leader of the Farm Workers, and an amazingly effective one, with a beautiful commitment of the most serious kind.
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Season 1
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Episode 17
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23:30
Political and Philosophical Entailments
I argue in this episode that pacifism entails the repudiation of utilitarianism (as well as other forms of teleological ethics) and also anti-statism. Around 20:49 I say 'Dorothy Day' when I mean Jane Addams.
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Season 1
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Episode 16
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24:15
Non-Violence of the Spirit: Teachings of Thomas Merton
The great spiritual teacher, Trappist monk, and advocate of universal spirit (1915-1968) and his development of Catholic teachings and Dorothy Day's radicalism and anarchism.
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Season 1
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Episode 15
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28:21
A Fundamental Source: Bayard Rustin
The great civil rights organizer, close collaborator of A.J. Muste, A. Philip Randolph and Martin Luther King, immersed in Gandhi, whose movement he brought to the US. His directness and vulnerability.
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Season 1
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Episode 14
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27:51
Dorothy Day Slaps Harry Truman (Peacefully)
The founder of the Catholic Worker, prospective saint, helper of all who need and incandescent advocate of peace in World War 2 and Vietnam. The clearest, fastest American protest against the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
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Season 1
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Episode 13
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28:42
'War is the Health of the State': On Randolph Bourne
The short-lived, physically challenged young intellectual who attacked his teacher John Dewey and other liberals who endorsed WWI (Herbert Croly, e.g.) to do a lot better in various respects.
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Season 1
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Episode 12
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27:43
Jane Addams 2 (bonus): My Grandfather's Correspondence with Her
In 1935, the last year of both of their lives, Herman Bernstein (my mother's mother's father) asked Jane Addams and many other eminent people whether permanent peace was possible. I read in her response, from his book "Can We Abolish War?"
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Season 1
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Episode 11
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13:33
The Great Jane Addams in WWI
The brilliant Nobel Prize winner, Hull House founder, associate of Dewey etc and her embroilment in the anti-war movement in the lead-up to World War I.
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Season 1
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Episode 10
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28:51
The Pacifist William James
I'm stunned to find out that William James accounted himself a pacifist. The context at the turn of the 19th into the 20th century has been entirely transformed. His problematic relation to his own hypermasculine student Teddy Roosevelt.
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Season 1
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Episode 9
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32:35
How Pacifism Survived Into the Twentieth Century
An amazing and seemingly destined transmission and return: Ballou to Tolstoy, Tolstoy to Gandhi, Gandhi to King. If the podcast makes an historical contribution, it is in this episode.
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Season 1
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Episode 8
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25:43
Lucretia Mott and the Post-War Peace Movement
A hero of Thoreau and Emerson ("Civil Disobedience" is Lucretia Mott without Jesus), spearhead of abolitionism, feminism (a convener of Seneca Falls), and pacifism. One of the greatest persons and personalities America has produced. I use her s...
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Season 1
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Episode 7
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24:38
Adin Ballou: System-Builder and Influencer for Peace
One of the fundamental influences on Tolstoy (with whom he corresponded), and hence on Gandhi and King, Ballou (1803-1890) gave much more careful and elaborate accounts of non-resistance than most of his contemporaries.Also, he completel...
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Season 1
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Episode 6
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27:23
Henry Clarke Wright: Essence of Radical Reform
Wright "shocks all the old women with his infidel writings," said Thoreau in his journal. Boy we can see why.
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Season 1
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Episode 5
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27:46
The Magnificent William Lloyd Garrison
An ethical hero who lived from 1805 to 1879: direct influence on Tolstoy and hence on Gandhi and King.
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Season 1
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Episode 4
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33:41
David Low Dodge: First American Peace Activist
The mediator's kingdom is not of this world, b! The founder of the New York Peace Society (1774-1852) was one of earliest American anti-war advocates. A source for the Garrisonians and others who followed, Dodge taught "the government of God", ...
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Season 1
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Episode 3
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33:07
John Woolman: Early Abolitionist, Pacifist, Spiritual Genius
Discusses the spiritual classic The Journal of John Woolman, which is a fundamental document of American radical conscience. As represented in section 5 of the Journal, Woolman (1720-1772) had to help work out collective resistanc...
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Season 1
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Episode 2
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33:10