To hear Ross, who has covered Mexico for Noticias Aliadas (Lima), Texas
Observer, San Francisco Bay Guardian and "other screwball publications,"
tell it, the American Left is dead and buried. Fittingly, he sets his
history/dialogue in a graveyard populated by the ghosts of its heroes.
Here lies E.B. Schnaubelt, Emma Goldman, Lucy Parsons, Sacco and
Vanzetti and a host of others whose radical lifestyles and actions left
their mark on those Communists, anarchists and revolutionaries who saw
America in more utopian terms than the capitalists they fought. Soaked
by alcohol and salved by drugs, Ross, who has made a life out of
dissent, converses with the dead (and dying from memory), lamenting the
Left's losses, its infighting, its failures and the occasional victory.
But Ross stumbles in his rhetorical excesses and in his efforts to tie
together so many disparate rebels and outlaws—from Goldman and Fidel to
the Weathermen and Civil Rights leaders.
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario