“Passages of Rebellion,”by Fran Shor, 2020
This is a
semi-autobiographical story about
Those
involved in the
The real Fran Shor did not participate in these raids, so this book is a bit like putting himself in their shoes.
The
ideological content involves a pacifist and moral opposition to violence and
war, using civil disobedience, non-violent occupations, public displays and property
damage to hinder the war effort. Camus’s
“The Rebel” is the foundational text.
Frank, as well as some other draft resistors in his circle at the
There are
political pokes against more radical activists, some in SDS, some spouting
revolutionary clichés about ‘picking up the gun.’ Though the novel acknowledges
that the older black vets coming back from
The Real Minnesota 8 |
Frank during this period meets an attractive fellow grad student, Mary, and quickly gets married. This is the personal side of the story, but his obsession with the anti-war movement ultimately breaks them apart. This happens prior to his knowledge that she was pregnant, which forms the coda of the book. In this part of the book, one character, Ruth, becomes an Andrea Dworkin-style feminist. The story tracks the historical timeline of events during these tumultuous years and mentions key books read by beginning leftists of the time. This ‘name-dropping’ method doesn’t really integrate the books or events into the story.
As to the writing, it is somewhat simplistic, including many details that have no relation to the plot. For instance Frank stops at Al’s Breakfast in Dinkytown, a favorite dining spot in a famous University neighborhood. This is evidently meant to spur nostalgia and knowing nods from local readers. There is a lot of this, which mentions local place names, gets in two sly references to Dylan lyrics and includes random details that add little to the story, the language or the ideas.
At any rate, part of the literature of the local and national left which many people will identify with. Pick it up today!
P.S. – Don Olson will be providing his insights on this book later.
Other prior
blog reviews on this subject, use blog search box, upper left: “Into the
Streets (Felien); “American Pastoral” (Roth), “The Real Balfour Declaration,”
or type in the word “
And I bought it at May Day Books!
Red Frog
December 8, 2020
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