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E-book
Author Marling, William

Title Christian Anarchist Ammon Hennacy, a Life on the Catholic Left
Published New York : New York University Press, 2022

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Description 1 online resource (232 p.)
Contents Frontmatter -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Introduction -- 1. Early Life -- 2. Prison -- 3. New York City and the Big Hike -- 4. Bisanakee and Milwaukee -- 5. Life at Hard Labor -- 6. Becoming "Ammon Hennacy" -- 7. The New York Years -- 8. In the Land of the Mormons -- Conclusion -- Acknowledgments -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index -- About the Author
Summary A biography of a remarkable figure, whose politics prefigured today's social justice, ecology, and gender equality movements Ammon Hennacy was arrested over thirty times for opposing US entry in World War 1. Later, when he refused to pay taxes that support war, he lost his wife and daughters, and then his job. For protesting the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, he was hounded by the IRS and driven to migrant labor in the fields of the West. He had a romance with Dorothy Day, founder of the Catholic Worker, who called him a "prophet and a peasant." He helped the homeless on the Bowery, founded the Joe Hill House of Hospitality in Salt Lake City, and protested the US development of nuclear missiles, becoming in the process one of the most celebrated anarchists of the twentieth century. To our era, when so much "protest" happens on social media, his actual sacrifices seem unworldly. Ammon Hennacy was a forerunner of contemporary progressive thought, and he remains a beacon for challenges that confront the world and especially the US today. In this exceptional biography, William Marling tells the story of this fascinating figure, who remains particularly important for the Catholic Left. In addition to establishing Hennacy as an exemplar of vegetarianism, ecology, and pacificism, Marling illuminates a broader history of political ideas now largely lost: the late nineteenth-century utopian movements, the grassroots socialist movements before World War I, and the antinuclear protests of the 1960s. A nuanced study of when religion and anarchist theory overlap, Christian Anarchist shows how Hennacy's life at the heart of radical libertarian and anarchist interventions in American politics not only galvanized the public then, but offers us new insight for today
Notes Description based upon print version of record
Subject Hennacy, Ammon, 1893-1970.
SUBJECT Hennacy, Ammon, 1893-1970 fast
Subject Catholics -- United States -- Biography
Anarchists -- United States -- Biography
BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Religious.
Anarchists
Catholics
United States
Genre/Form Biographies
Form Electronic book
ISBN 1479811254
9781479811250