In loving, living memory, John Melançon 1928 – 2007
For the new-forming Radical Research Collective, we asked ourselves to share our influences (and the project we want to work on). Here's my attempt.
Number one largest influence on my understanding of the economy and some other aspects of society:
Jane Jacobs.
I read her in books, though some essays are online (some bad links) http://www.preservenet.com/theory/Jacobs.html
Most usefully http://www.preservenet.com/theory/Jacobsbiox.html
Most of my influences are online. Go figure. They are also white males, so apparently I'm representing my demographic here after all.
Most unique/important especially in a U.S. context:
Joe Bageant - http://www.joebageant.com/
Here's a good essay that touches on academia, and at the same time conveys the particular perspectives that make, for me, Joe Bageant an essential starting point to our venture:
http://www.joebageant.com/joe/2007/04/a_feral_dog_how.html
Douglas Rushkoff - http://rushkoff.com/
Naomi Klein - http://www.naomiklein.org/
And more, in roughly reverse chronological order:
James Herod, "Getting Free" - I have a copy and there's a copy in Encuentro 5 in Suren's office. An older online copy is here: http://site.www.umb.edu/faculty/salzman_g/Strate/GetFre/C.htm
Currently http://www.jamesherod.info/ is down
Sean Donahue - http://greenmanramblings.blogspot.com/
Al Giordano - http://narconews.com/
Howard Zinn
Noam Chomsky
Seth Godin - http://sethgodin.typepad.com/
Robert Jensen - http://uts.cc.utexas.edu/~rjensen/articles.html
John Melançon, my father, who distilled the knowledge and insight of many on this list
Martin Luther King Jr.
Ella Baker
C. E. Ayres - he wrote mostly in the 1920s and 1930s, I have some of his books, most important among them "The Divine Right of Capital"
A. Philip Randolph
Lucy Parsons
Eugene V. Debs
W.E.B. DuBois (in part through his step-son, David DuBois, who taught at UMass-Amherst)
Ida B. Wells
Thomas Paine
John Locke
(I have never tried to put together such a list before, and I am prone to stunning gaps in recall memory, so I may well have left out a key influence!)
Economics for a Better World: Greater Equality of Wealth Brings Greater Economic Growth (this is my never-written thesis, arguing the case for equality primarily within the largely incorrect assumptions of neoclassical economic theory, while alluding to the fuller and more real economic reality).
Comments
I was concerned that the
I was concerned that the first people I listed as influences to share with the Radical Research Collective were all white men (although as the sole one at that first meeting yesterday, i guess i should represent my demographic, heh)
and then i remembered that the thinker who is the single most important influence, to the extent that I am aware and can measure it, is Jane Jacobs!
lots of other people (including those listed here) i read and like and help me, but often tend to confirm what i intuit about society and economy (or state something clearly enough for me to reject). Her writings on cities and how economies really work is what's really opened new ways of looking at the world to me.
Oop, here's one I forgot:
Richard D. Wolff - http://www.umass.edu/resnick-wolff/books.html
And more professors:
Barry Field
Nancy Folbre
Stephen Simurda
Craig Thomas
Stephanie Luce
Leah Wing
And friends:
Amanda Miller
Jeff Hartman né Burke
Dan Hakimzadeh
Brian Corbin
Heather Turner
Andrea Wilkins y Martínez
... and a lot more