Barbara Deming
Deming, Barbara, San Francisco to Moscow: Why the Russians let them in
In Barbara Deming, Revolution and Equilibrium (A. 1.a.ii. Theories of Civil Disobedience, Power and Revolution)(Article originally published in the Nation 23 December 1961.)
Deming, Barbara, San Francisco to Moscow: Why they walk
In Barbara Deming, Revolution and Equilibrium (A. 1.a.ii. Theories of Civil Disobedience, Power and Revolution)(Article originally published in the Nation 15 July.)
See also: Barbara Deming, San Francisco to Moscow: Why the Russians let them in, In Barbara Deming, Revolution and Equilibrium (A. 1.a.ii. Theories of Civil Disobedience, Power and Revolution) New York, Grossman, 1971 , pp. 60-72
Deming, Barbara, Revolution and Equilibrium
The title essay confronts the case for violence made by Frantz Fanon, in his critique of colonialism (see 1a.iii), and by many US militants in the later 1960s, and argues that radical nonviolent action can be an alternative. Other essays by this feminist nonviolent activist and writer cover a wide range of protests. (The title essay is also available as a separate pamphlet from A.J. Muste Memorial Institute, New York.)
Deming, Barbara, Earle Reynolds: Stranger in This Country
In Barbara Deming, Revolution and Equilibrium (A. 1.a.ii. Theories of Civil Disobedience, Power and Revolution)On the transnational protests by the ship ‘Everyman III’ which sailed from London to Leningrad to protest against Soviet nuclear tests.