Sunday, September 30, 2007

Eugene V. Debs, a Popular Prisoner

In 1920, US union leader and prominent socialist activist Eugene V. Debs was nominated and ran for president on the Socialist Party ticket. He conducted his entire campaign from his prison cell, since he had been convicted of wartime sedition in 1918. Nevertheless, he received almost a million votes. Debs also ran for president in 1900, 1904, 1908, and 1912 on the Socialist ticket, but had started his political career as the Democratic City Clerk of Terre Haute, Indiana.

Source: "Eugene Victor Debs, 1855-1926," EugeneVDebs.com.

Saturday, September 29, 2007

Rebecca West, Another Name-Changing Feminist

"I have never been able to find out precisely what feminism is," wrote Rebecca West in 1913, "I only know that people call me a feminist whenever I express sentiments that differentiate me from a doormat." The woman known as Rebecca West was born Cicely Isabel Fairfield. She then later changed her first name to Cicily, before finally taking her nom de plume from the name of a character in "Romersholm," a play by Henrik Ibsen.

Source: Richard Robinson, University of East Anglia. "Rebecca West." The Literary Encyclopedia. 19 Dec. 2003. The Literary Dictionary Company. 20 September 2007.

Friday, September 28, 2007

Howard Hampton Versus Scientology

In 1991, then-Attorney General for the Province of Ontario, Canada (and current New Democratic Party leader and MPP for Kenora-Rainy River) filed a preferred indictment against the Church of Scientology in Canada and ten of its individual members, following the revelation of a spectacular set of break-ins and infiltrations of various Ontario governmental offices. The organisation was fined $250 000.

Sources: Joel J. Hanes, "Scientology in Canada."

"Scientology's Criminal History in Canada," Holysmoke.org.

Thursday, September 27, 2007

Dorothy Parker, A Busy Woman

During the height of American literary sensation Dorothy Parker's fame, an editor for the New Yorker magazine kept trying to pressure her into writing for him. She kept refusing. Eventually, the hapless editor asked her why she wouldn't write for the New Yorker. She said, "I'm too fucking busy and vice versa."

Source: Malcolm Gladwell, personal anecdote, 1999.

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Barbara Ehrenreich, Barbara Who?

When Barbara Ehrenreich was getting ready to begin her experiential research for her book Bait and Switch, she legally changed her name to "Barbara Alexander."

Source: Jill Owens, "Undercover With Barbara Ehrenreich," Powells.com.

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Frederik Pohl, A Very Bad Communist

SF writer Frederik Pohl, doubtless influenced by his extremely left-leaning colleagues in The Futurians (a New York City-based group of science fiction fans active between 1938 and 1945), joined the Communist Party in 1936, but got kicked out sometime thereafter.

Source: The Futurians, Damon Knight. John Day, 1977.

Monday, September 24, 2007

Duncan "Atrios" Black, a Very Sweaty Economist

Before star blogger Duncan Black, aka "Atrios," actually revealed his identity, he repeatedly claimed he was a gym teacher.