Rebel mother : my childhood chasing the revolution
(2017)

Nonfiction

eAudiobook

Provider: hoopla

Details

EDITION
Unabridged
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource (1 audio file (9hr., 51 min.)) : digital

ISBN/ISSN
9781541423671 (sound recording : hoopla Audio Book) MWT11879391, 1541423674 (sound recording : hoopla Audio Book) 11879391
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

Read by Robert Fass

Carol Andreas was a traditional 1950s housewife from a small Mennonite town in central Kansas who became a radical feminist and Marxist revolutionary. From the late sixties to the early eighties, she went through multiple husbands and countless lovers while living in three states and five countries. She took her youngest son, Peter, with her wherever she went, even kidnapping him and running off to South America after his straitlaced father won a long and bitter custody fight. They were chasing the revolution together, though the more they chased it the more distant it became. They battled the bad "isms" (sexism, imperialism, capitalism, fascism, consumerism), and fought for the good "isms" (feminism, socialism, communism, egalitarianism). They were constantly running, moving, and hiding. Between the ages of five and eleven, Peter attended more than a dozen schools and lived in more than a dozen homes, moving from the suburbs of Detroit to a hippie commune in Berkeley to a socialist collective farm in Chile to highland villages and coastal shantytowns in Peru. When they secretly returned to America, they settled down clandestinely in Denver, where his mother changed her name to hide from his father

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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