Tuesday, March 4

Angela Davis is a revolutionary activist, scholar, and author known for her work in civil rights, Black liberation, prison abolition, and feminism.

Early Life & Education

  • Born on January 26, 1944, in Birmingham, Alabama, she grew up in a neighborhood nicknamed “Dynamite Hill” due to frequent Ku Klux Klan bombings.
  • She studied philosophy under Herbert Marcuse, a Marxist scholar, at Brandeis University and later continued her education in Germany and at the University of California, San Diego.

Activism & Black Panther Party

  • She became involved in the Civil Rights Movement, Black Panther Party, and Communist Party USA during the 1960s.
  • She focused on issues of racism, prison abolition, and workers’ rights.

Arrest & Trial (1970-1972)

  • In 1970, she was falsely accused of involvement in an attempted prison break led by Jonathan Jackson at the Marin County Courthouse.
  • She was placed on the FBI’s Most Wanted List, captured, and spent 18 months in jail before being acquitted in 1972.
  • The “Free Angela” movement became a global rallying cry for justice.

Scholarship & Legacy

  • She has written several influential books, including:
    • Women, Race & Class (1981) – Examining the intersections of race, gender, and class in oppression.
    • Are Prisons Obsolete? (2003) – Advocating for prison abolition and criminal justice reform.
    • Freedom Is a Constant Struggle (2015) – Connecting Black liberation to global struggles.
  • She has been a professor and public speaker, advocating for abolition democracy and socialist principles.

Present-Day Influence

  • Angela Davis remains an influential figure in Black Lives Matter, feminism, and discussions on mass incarceration.
  • She continues to inspire activists fighting for racial justice, workers’ rights, and gender equality worldwide.

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