Events and Victims

Regular price $ 6.95

by Bartolomeo Vanzetti, Edited by Jon Curley

PM Press

4/2018, staple-bound booklet

SKU: 9781629635170

 

This work by Bartolomeo Vanzetti, edited and with a detailed introduction by Jon Curley, features a never-before-published short story by this famous anarchist and victim of legal persecution, xenophobia, and condemnation for his radical politics. That fact that Vanzetti, an Italian immigrant, learned to write in English while jailed for a capital crime is remarkable enough. What is even more astonishing is that he chose to use his new language skills to write creatively, inventing a parable about worker exploitation and environmental disaster that is as relevant today as it was almost one hundred years ago when this prisoner took up his pen.

Events and Victims allows Vanzetti a new literary and historical voice, an important document that narrates the very injustice that its author suffered and fought. In a time of assault on immigrants, dissidents, radicals, and the environment, Events and Victims is as timely as ever.

Reviews:

"Bartolomeo Vanzetti lives in our memory largely as a symbol, martyr to the mob rule that poses as justice in the United States. Until now, the man himself was knowable primarily through his prison letters, but Jon Curley has added to Vanzetti's legacy by springing Events and Victims, his sole known work of fiction, from its archival shackles. Published for the first time, the story contributes to the literary history of anarchism, prison writing, and the canon of resistance and refusal, composed even as the author himself was continuing to master English while facing his cruel and unjust death. This story adds greatly to our historical understanding of Vanzetti--and in its grim vision of a cruel society in which capital relentlessly harnesses war, media, and technology to expropriate value even from crushed human bodies, holds continued relevance even today." --Whitney Strub, author of Perversion for Profit: The Politics of Pornography and the Rise of the New Right

"A mordant critique of modern industrial life told through the story of a workplace accident, an accident that is in fact the logical outcome of social and economic imperatives. Blind aspirational faith in the New Liberian Dream of individual gain leads laborers in a dye factory to grow ill from chemical exposure, while the young foreman confronts the calamitous solitude of crass ambition. Even the skeptics are unable to escape the demands of the new social order. Awaiting his own execution, Vanzetti takes aim at the burgeoning military industrial complex, environmental degradation, xenophobia fueled by global labor migration, stultifying popular culture, compromised press, and greed of industrial oligarchs in this unexpectedly timely short story." --Judith Halasz, author of The Bohemian Ethos: Questioning Work and Making a Scene on the Lower East Side

About the Contributors:

Bartolomeo Vanzetti was born in Villafalletto, Italy in 1888. As an immigrant anarchist, he was at the center of one of the most notorious legal cases of the 20th century, along with Nicola Sacco, that highlighted American anti-immigrant and anti-radical sentiment during the Red Scare.

Jon Curley is a poet and teacher, whose collections include Hybrid Moments and Scorch Marks.