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Angela Y. Davis
is known internationally for her ongoing work to combat all forms
of oppression in the U.S. and abroad. Over the years she has been
active as a student, teacher, writer, scholar, and activist/organizer.
She is a living witness to the historical struggles of the contemporary
era.
Professor Davis'
political activism began when she was a youngster in Birmingham,
Alabama, and continued through her high school years in New York.
But it was not until 1969 that she came to national attention after
being removed from her teaching position in the Philosophy Department
at UCLA as a result of her social activism and her membership in
the Communist Party, USA. In 1970 she was placed on the FBI's Ten
Most Wanted List on false charges, and was the subject of an intense
police search that drove her underground and culminated in one of
the most famous trials in recent U.S. history. During her sixteen-month
incarceration, a massive international "Free Angela Davis" campaign
was organized, leading to her acquittal in 1972.
Prof. Davis'
long-standing commitment to prisoners' rights dates back to her
involvement in the campaign to free the Soledad Brothers, which
led to her own arrest and imprisonment. Today, she remains an advocate
of prison abolition and has developed a powerful critique of racism
in the criminal justice system. She is a member of the Advisory
Board of the Prison Activist Resource Center, and currently is working
on a comparative study of women's imprisonment in the U.S., the
Netherlands, and Cuba. In 1997, Prof. Davis helped found Critical
Resistance, a national organization dedicated to dismantling the
Prison Industrial Complex (PIC), a concept she developed.
During the
last twenty-five years, Prof. Davis has lectured in all of the fifty
United States, as well as in Africa, Europe, the Caribbean, and
the former Soviet Union. Her articles and essays have appeared in
numerous journals and anthologies, and she is the author of five
books, including Angela Davis: An Autobiography; Women,
Race & Class; and the recently published Blues Legacies and
Black Feminism: Gertrude "Ma" Rainey, Bessie Smith and
Billie Holiday. The Angela Y. Davis Reader, a collection
of Prof. Davis' writings that spans nearly three decades, was published
in 1998.
Former California
Governor Ronald Reagan once vowed that Angela Davis would never
again teach in the University of California system. From 1994 to
1997, she held the distinguished honor of an appointment to the
University of California Presidential Chair in African American
and Feminist Studies. Today, she is a tenured professor in the History
of Consciousness Department at the University of California, Santa
Cruz.
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