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A
Good Listener
Studs
Terkel, a prolific American writer and broadcaster over several
decades, died at the end October at the age of 96. His style and
approach is well illustrated by the sub-title of his 1975 book
Working: People talk about what they do all
day and how they feel
about what they do. Besides the subject of work, he dealt with
leisure, family and education, culture and sub-culture. An article
partly based on his writings appeared in the Socialist Standard
for August 2003.
Some
of Terkel’s nine thousand interviews — especially the broadcast
ones — were with celebrities of various kinds. But his books were
mainly about the life experiences of everyday men and women. He
quoted these graphic words of an assembly-line worker: “I stand in
one spot, about two or three feet area all night . . . it don’t
stop. It just goes and goes. I bet there’s men who lived and died
out there, never seen the end of that line.” Or again: “They give
better care to that machine than they will to you . . . If that
machine breaks down, there’s somebody out there to fix it right
away. If I break down, I’m just pushed over to the other side till
another man takes my place. The only thing they have on their mind is
to keep that line running.”
Terkel
also captured people’s memories of the Depression years and the
Second World War. Again and again the themes of solidarity and
sharing shine through amidst the destitution and suffering. A woman
born in 1911 recalls the ’20s in a mining town in Illinois: “we’d
go out picnics, we’d go out fishing, all families. Everything for
the picnic. And then when you went to the picnic, there was no money
exchanged, no commercial, everything like one big family. They’d
cook a pot of mulligan stew and everybody’d share out of that. That
was a picnic. Today you go on a picnic, what is it? It’s
commercial. You buy your ticket, you buy your popcorn, you buy your
beer. If you haven’t got a fistful of money, you haven’t got no
picnic.”
As
Oliver Sacks once said, “There is no one in the world who can
listen like Studs Terkel.” Reading his books provides an
unforgettable picture of working-class American life and shows that,
contrary to what may sometimes appear, American workers are
dissatisfied with their lot and more than prepared to fight for
better times.
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IMAGINE
The Fall 2008 issue of the journal
of the Socialist Party of Canada has
now arrived. A copy can be ordered
for £1 (cheque made payable to “The
Socialist Party of Great Britain) from
the Socialist Party, 52 Clapham High
St, London SW4 7UN.
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Socialist Party Merchandise
Teeshirts:
Blue with polar bear and ‘If you were a polar bear, you’d be a
socialist’ plus party website address.
Yellow, with blue and green globe ‘The world is a treasury for all’
plus party web site address on.
Sizes: Small, Medium, Large, Extra Large.
Mugs:
One style: ‘Duet’ - Red and white with ‘Only sheep need leaders’
(pictured) and website on, with ‘’Famine? War? Pollution? Capitalism is
the Problem. World Socialism s the Solution’’ and party tel. number on.
Pens:
Blue and white, with blue ink ‘Only sheep need leaders’ and a sheep
plus party website
Red and white, with blue ink ‘Workers of the world unite’ plus party
website
Black with black ink. ‘Only sheep need leaders!’ and a sheep plus party
website
Baseball
caps:
Navy blue, with embroidered ‘’World Socialist Movement’’ on.
Balloons:
Different colours, with ‘’World Socialist Movement’’ on.
Prices:
Tee shirts £7.00 each. Mugs £5.00 each. Pens £0.50
each. Baseball caps £5.00 each. Balloons
15p each
Postage and packaging
£2.50 on the first £10 worth of stuff, then £1.50 on
subsequent £10 worths.
Please send cheque or postal order (no cash) made payable to SPGB SW
Regional Branch, c/o Veronica Clanchy, FAO: South West Regional Branch,
42 Winifred Road, Poole, Dorset. BH15 3PU. Any queries, please phone
01202 569826.
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