San Francisco Chronicle

History and literature shaped by everyday people

- By Evan Karp Evan Karp is the creator of Quiet Lightning and Litseen.com. Twitter: @Litseen

Too often, it is difficult to feel — much less mobilize — the power of the civic voice amid the forces of government and the interests of the city and state. In part an effort to combat this, last year an all-volunteer group of writers and activists created the Howard Zinn Book Fair: A Celebratio­n of People’s History, Past Present and Future.

Taking as inspiratio­n Zinn’s seminal book “A People’s History of the United States” (1980), the fair returns for a second annual event Sunday, Nov. 15, bringing together historians, poets, journalist­s, community leaders and grassroots organizers to discuss a wide range of social issues, including race, class and the criminal justice system.

“It was important for us to build something that reflected the vast contributi­ons of everyday people to both politics and literature,” said co-founder and committee member James Tracy by e-mail. “The book fair is a Public Service Announceme­nt reminding us that history is something everyday people can shape together.

“Howard Zinn’s brilliance was his ability to use history to inspire people to ask hard questions about the future,” Tracy said. “The book fair is an opportunit­y to think beyond today’s controvers­ies and campaigns and think about what comes next. The Bay Area has a rich history of dissent, and we want to make sure that it doesn’t get whitewashe­d away as our region goes through such extreme changes.”

Patrick Marks, coordinati­ng committee member and owner of the Green Arcade bookstore, said by e-mail that “the nearly sixty panels the fair presents this year reflect a broad spectrum of the work and expression of many different individual­s and groups who continue the legacies of writers and activists like Howard Zinn. The continuity of these legacies is ensured,” he writes, “as evidenced by the keynote at the fair: Dr. Clayborne Carson, civil rights movement veteran, in conversati­on with Alicia Garza, cofounder of the Black Lives Matter Movement, introduced by Nicholas Baham III, Cal State East Bay Ethnic Studies Professor & author of “The Coltrane Church: Apostles of Sound, Agents of Social Justice.”

Rainbow Grocery Cooperativ­e member and Book Fair Coordinati­ng Committee member Christina Manalansan e-mailed that the fair is important specifical­ly because it’s in San Francisco, “even though so many leftists and radicals are being pushed out of the City, along with their projects.”

“Earlier this year, my house (in the Mission) survived an eviction threat,” Manalansan said, “and during our fight we liked using the phrase ‘Still Here.’ I’ve noticed other groups and small businesses in the Mission saying ‘We’re still here!’ as well. Basically, not everyone is gone yet! So when I heard the HZBF was going to be a thing, I really wanted to help out to show that there are, indeed, leftists and radicals who are ‘Still Here!’ ”

 ?? Courtesy James Tracy ?? The Howard Zinn Book Fair is named for the late historian and activist.
Courtesy James Tracy The Howard Zinn Book Fair is named for the late historian and activist.

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