Skip to search
Skip to main content
Search in
Keyword
Title (keyword)
Author (keyword)
Subject (keyword)
Title starts with
Subject (browse)
Author (browse)
Author (sorted by title)
Call number (browse)
search for
Search
Advanced Search
Bookmarks
(
0
)
Princeton University Library Catalog
Start over
Cite
Send
to
SMS
Email
EndNote
RefWorks
RIS
Printer
Bookmark
Hard times are fighting times / Alice Proujansky.
Photographer
Proujansky, Alice
[Browse]
Format
Book
Language
English
Published/Created
[Portland, Oregon?]: Gnomic Book, [2023].
©2023.
Description
227 pages : illustrations (black and white, and color), 28 cm
Details
Subject(s)
Proujansky, Jed
[Browse]
Deely, Joan
[Browse]
Weatherman (Organization)
[Browse]
Native American Solidarity Committee
[Browse]
Prairie Fire Organizing Committee
[Browse]
Political activists
—
United States
—
20th century
[Browse]
Left-wing extremists
—
United States
—
20th century
[Browse]
Writer of essay
Jones, Thai, 1977-
[Browse]
Interviewer
Lubben, Kristen
[Browse]
Interviewee
Proujansky, Jed
[Browse]
Deely, Joan
[Browse]
Library of Congress genre(s)
Photobooks
[Browse]
Getty AAT genre
photobooks
—
United States
—
2024
[Browse]
Summary note
Most families don't have their parents' FBI files in dusty boxes. Alice Proujansky's does. Hard Times are Fighting Times describes the legacy of Proujansky's parents' participation in radical leftist groups like Weatherman, the Native American Solidarity Committee and Prairie Fire that sought to overthrow imperialism and capitalism through organizing and revolution. Proujansky began work on Hard Times are Fighting Times in 2017, photographing her parents' propaganda archive, surveillance records, family snapshots and current lives, describing their activism, and subsequent turn toward family life, from an intimate distance. She writes, "My parents fell in love while planning a 60,000-person demonstration in 1976 (their friends joked it would never last: my mom was a Marxist, my dad an anarcho-communist). The story of their activism is the story of me. Radicals like my parents believed that another world was possible, that together they could forge a more just future for humanity. Their utopian dreams of Marxist-Leninism, feminist rigor and fairness are deeply compelling but also intensely rigid. Weatherman bombed the Capitol, the Pentagon, the State Department and the NYPD Headquarters. They issued communiques ('Don't Look For Us, Dog; We'll Find You First') and rioted to bring down the US government. The FBI was intensely focused on this small group of mostly white college students, tapping phones, surveilling members and attempting to infiltrate the organization." Fears of surveillance and a need for secrecy left few photographs in Proujansky's family archive. But the New Left was image-driven in another sense: the aspirational image of uncompromising radicals seeking revolution at any cost. Mainstream histories of the movement focus on curdled utopianism, charismatic individuals, flower children gone druggy and dark. Hard Times are Fighting Times offers a fuller understanding. Violent dogma plays a part, but so does a beautiful dream of shared labor, equity and justice. Personal items show rigid expectations, but also familial love, loyalty and humor. The book describes a family unit with its own political movement, nation-state, culture and system of belief, as Proujansky considers if she can live up to these expectations: which parts of these perspectives to keep, and what to discard?
Notes
Book has two subtitles: 'The archive' and 'The family'.
Printed similar to a tête bêche book: recto pages are for "The Archive" (labeled 2) and verso pages are for "The Family" (labeled 1). All pages are numbered twice, consistent to which way you're reading the book: left to right for "The Archive" and right to left for "The Family".
ISBN
9781957301020
1957301023
OCLC
1417274351
Statement on responsible collection description
Princeton University Library aims to describe library materials in a manner that is respectful to the individuals and communities who create, use, and are represented in the collections we manage.
Read more...
Other views
Staff view
Ask a Question
Suggest a Correction
Supplementary Information