Max Lewontin (@maxlewontin) 's Twitter Profile
Max Lewontin

@maxlewontin

History grad student, former journalist.

ID: 3603223455

calendar_today09-09-2015 23:32:27

298 Tweet

207 Followers

285 Following

Rashida Tlaib (@rashidatlaib) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Union-busting via the courts is unbecoming of a leading public institution with a rich history of labor organizing. This is shameful. I stand with Grad Employees' Org UMich and the mass student, faculty, & staff movement to demand safe working and living environments at U-M. #StrikeForSafeCampus

Jeanne Theoharis (@jeannetheoharis) 's Twitter Profile Photo

On this King holiday, one of the greatest distortions of Dr. King's legacy in recent years has been how people try to use King to chastise Black Lives Matter--erasing King's long history calling out police brutality North & South and his challenge Northern liberals. A thread:

On this King holiday, one of the greatest distortions of Dr. King's legacy in recent years has been how people try to use King to chastise Black Lives Matter--erasing King's long history calling out police brutality North & South and his challenge Northern liberals. A thread:
theJuiceMedia 🦋 (@thejuicemedia) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The Australien Government has made an ad about the new media legislation it just passed, and it's surprisingly honest and informative!

🦋🌸Gimme the Lute🌸🦋 סלע (@moontwerk) 's Twitter Profile Photo

As I explore the archives, there’s an interesting trend I’m finding in radical/oppositional/Black power publications from the 60s/70s: testimonies from incarcerated people about working with “revolutionary lawyers.” Here’s an example: 1/

Civil_War_MBTA (@mbtawar) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Brother, Hope is forever elusive. I soddenly write from the riverbank. Our MBTA #orangeline train has caught fire. Windows were shattered. We jumped in the river to escape. Tell mother and father I will not be home for supper.

Brother,
Hope is forever elusive. I soddenly write from the riverbank. Our <a href="/MBTA/">MBTA</a> #orangeline train has caught fire. Windows were shattered. We jumped in the river to escape. Tell mother and father I will not be home for supper.
BU Grad Workers (@gradworkersofbu) 's Twitter Profile Photo

1/ Earlier this week at Boston University (Boston University), in a required class for 1st year Phd students, the class was lectured for an hour on why they as graduate workers did not deserve a living wage. This has never before been a standard part of the syllabus in this class.

Ashley D. Farmer (@drashleyfarmer) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Part of Ye's "genius" is his ability to manipulate Black Power phrases, principles, & people over beats. He uses movement iconography to gain Black legitimacy while serving white supremacy. In Harper’s BAZAAR I talk about how he does this & how his mama taught him better!

Charles W McKinney, Jr. (@charleswmckinn2) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Historians/Black Studies Scholars - I'm working up a course on the history of Black Women's activism in the US. What should we read? Please retweet widely.

Publishers Weekly (@publisherswkly) 's Twitter Profile Photo

BREAKING: The Internet Archive has lost its appeal in Hachette v. Internet Archive, the long-running, closely watched copyright case over the scanning and lending of print library books. Full story to follow.

AAIHS (@aaihs) 's Twitter Profile Photo

📚Black Perspectives (Black Perspectives) is hosting an online forum on the activism of Black women throughout the African Diaspora. Scholars discuss how Black women engaged in political and social activism to advocate for the lives of African descendants. aaihs.org/online-forum-b…

Black Perspectives (@blkperspectives) 's Twitter Profile Photo

👉🏾 As part of the “Urban Rebellions in the 1960s” forum, Marissa Spear (@marissaspear71) writes, “Baltimore Panther women understood the militancy necessary to defend the Party’s survival programs.” Read more at Black Perspectives: loom.ly/uuV_LXg AAIHS

👉🏾 As part of the “Urban Rebellions in the 1960s” forum, Marissa Spear (@marissaspear71) writes, “Baltimore Panther women understood the militancy necessary to defend the Party’s survival programs.” Read more at <a href="/BlkPerspectives/">Black Perspectives</a>: loom.ly/uuV_LXg <a href="/AAIHS/">AAIHS</a>
Library of Congress (@librarycongress) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Something to ponder as you head out to vote today, for free. In the Library's Rosa Parks Papers collection, there's a receipt for the poll tax she had to pay to vote in Alabama in 1956. Poll taxes, a Jim Crow-era voter suppression tool, were not abolished federally until 1964.

Something to ponder as you head out to vote today, for free. In the Library's Rosa Parks Papers collection, there's a receipt for the poll tax she had to pay to vote in Alabama in 1956. Poll taxes, a Jim Crow-era voter suppression tool, were not abolished federally until 1964.