''Emma Goldman'' is the story of a modern radical who
took seriously the idea that inner liberation is the
first business of social revolution. Her politics, from
beginning to end, was based on resistance to that which
thwarted the free development of the inner self. The
right to stay alive in one's senses, to enjoy freedom of
thought and speech, to reject the arbitrary use of power
- these were key demands in the many public protest
movements she helped mount. Anarchist par excellence,
Goldman is one of the memorable political figures of our
time, not because of her gift for theory or analysis or
even strategy, but because some extraordinary force of
life in her burned, without rest or respite, on behalf
of human integrity; and she was able to make the
thousands of people who, for decades on end, flocked to
her lectures, feel intimately connected to the pain
inherent in the abuse of that integrity. To hear Emma
describe, in language as magnetic as it was
illuminating, what the boot felt like on the neck, was
to experience the quality of organized oppression.As the
women and men in her audience listened to her, the
homeliness of their own small lives became invested with
a sense of drama that acted as a catalyst for the wild,
vagrant hope that things need not always be as they
were. All you had to do, she promised, was resist. In
time, she herself would become a world-famous symbol for
the spirit of resistance to the power of institutional
authority over the lone individual. In ''Emma Goldman'',
Vivian Gornick draws a surpassingly intimate and
insightful portrait of a woman of heroic proportions
whose performance on the stage of history did what
Tolstoy said a work of art should do: it made people
love life more. |
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