Earth First! Journal 19, no. 3
Keywords:
activism, journalism, conservation, animal protection, deforestation, nonviolent resistance, political ecology, protests, resistance, wildernessAbstract
Maenz, Kris, et al., eds., Earth First! Journal 19, no. 3 (1 February 1999). Republished by the Environment & Society Portal, Multimedia Library. http://www.environmentandsociety.org/node/7043.
In this issue of Earth First! Journal Ron Coronado discusses the politics of protest, Kris Maenz gives an update on the hunger strike of jailed English animal rights activist Barry Horne, and Jimmy Demos explores the reaches and pollution of the Mississippi.
"Hunger, deep and all consuming, eating your mind slowly but surely. In the first days your stomach growls, but after a while your belly shrinks so much you no longer notice the emptiness. Somewhere around the fifth day your body starts to eat itself. First it consumes your fat, then muscles, next your soft internal organs, then your brain, and then you die. Yet historically, hunger strikes have been an enduring form of nonviolent direct action. On October 6, 1998, Barry Horne, a jailed animal rights activist in England, began his third hunger strike from inside his cell at Full Sutton Prison in York."
— Kris Maenz
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