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The Long Honduran Night
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Table of Contents

IntroductionChapter One:Learning Curves: Resistance and Repression, 2009-2010Chapter Two:Locked Down: Campesinos, Police, and Prisoners, 2010-2011Chapter Three:Power in the North: Media, Solidarity, and the US Congress, 2012-2013Chapter Four:A Dictator Rises: Hernández and his US Friends, 2013-2014Chapter Five: Borderlands of Good and Evil: Immigrants and Indignados, 2014-2015Chapter Six:Boomerangs:Berta Cáceres and the View from the Backyard, 2016-2017AcknowledgementsSourcesIndex

Promotional Information

Galleys available • National Print Campaign: Send advance copies to the following publications: Mother Jones, The Nation, Washington Post, The Root, Jacobin, Huffington Post, Latin America Watch, Latin America Press, La Raza and more • Trades: Publisher's Weekly, Booklist, Kirkus, Library Journal• Pitch interviews and reviews to: Foreign Affairs, Atlantic, New Republic, The Nation, In These Times, NACLA, The Intercept, Root, Jacobin, Christian Science Monitor, Shelf Awareness, Black Agenda Report, NPR.org, Alternet, Truthout, Root, Racialicious, Huffington Post, Counterpunch• Promote on social media

About the Author

Dana Frankis a professor of history at the University of California, Santa Cruz. She is the author ofBuy American: The Untold Story of Economic Nationalism(Beacon, 1999);Purchasing Power: Consumer Organizing, Gender, and the Seattle Labor Movement, 19191929(Cambridge, 1994);Local Girl Makes History: Exploring Northern California's Kitsch Monuments(City Lights, 2007) and, with Howard Zinn and Robin D.G. Kelley, Three Strikes: Miners, Musicians, Salesgirls and the Fighting Spirit of Labor's Last Century(Beacon, 2001). Her contribution toThree Strikes has been reprinted, with a new introduction, by Haymarket Books asWomen Strikers Occupy Chain Story, Win Big(2012). Long active in labor solidarity work, since 2000 she has worked with the US Labor Education in the Americas Project (US/LEAP) in support of the banana unions in Latin America. Since the 2009 military coup her articles about human rights and U.S. policy in Honduras have appeared inThe Nation, New York Times, Politico Magazine, Foreign Affairs.com, The Baffler, Los Angeles Times, Miami Herald, and many other publications, and she has testified in both the U.S. Congress and Canadian Parliament.

Reviews

"I congratulate and thank Dana Frank for giving us this book and for documenting the role of the United States in the long night of terror that we have lived in Honduras since the 2009 coup d'etat. Her contribution to historic memory stands as our witness." --Bertha Oliva, general coordinator, Committee of the Families of the Detained and Disappeared in Honduras "Dana Frank has written a searing portrait of a nation in crisis, a book that is startling, enraging, and humane all at once. Her most important accomplishment is never losing sight of the hardships and treachery that ordinary Hondurans have had to endure these last several years, nor the dignity with which they have survived it all." -Daniel Alarcon, Executive Producer of Radio Ambulante, author of At Night We Walk in Circles "The Long Honduran Night breaks the deafening silence that has followed recent American intervention in Honduras. It graphically documents the awful legacy of this intervention." -Stephen Kinzer, award-winning author and foreign correspondent "If you've any interest at all in Honduras, U.S. foreign policy, Central America, why so many Central Americans are migrating north...or in a powerful, informative, and extremely good read, do pick up Dana Frank's book, The Long Honduran Night. It's a surprisingly readable book that tells not only the tragic story of another failed state and the forces that continue to work against establishing real democracies in Central America, but also inspires in its stories of everyday people-- in Honduras and the United States-- who work against difficult odds to create change, often by placing their lives at risk." -María Martin, independent journalist "Free from academic jargon, conversant with modern Honduran history, and steeped in passion, this testimonial book is the best primer, in English, about the coup, and resistance to it, that destroyed Honduran democracy on June 28, 2009. Dana Frank not only registers her solidarity movement and legislative initiatives in the U.S. on behalf of the multifaceted resistance to the coup and defense of Human Rights, her keen outsider's eye brings the novice gaze of contemporary Honduran political life into the country's cities and villages, its valleys and mountains, as well as into demonstrations and street marches, conversations in cabs, radio stations, and more. Almost ten years after the coup, Frank's book transits seamlessly between the social fabric and intimate lives of hundreds of Hondurans she has met personally during her many years in the country. Frank manages this while referencing key historical processes and their current legacies, an important and necessary feat on its own, but also valuable because it informs the current plight of Hondurans who flee their country into the U.S. seeking asylum in the aftermath of 2009 coup." -Dario A. Euraque, Professor of History and International Studies, Trinity College "A historian and activist offers a damning indictment of corruption, human rights violations, and failed U.S. policy in Honduras. Frank (Emerita, History/Univ. of California, Santa Cruz; Women Strikers Occupy Chain Store, Win Big: The 1937 Woolworth's Sit-Down, 2012, etc.) offers a heady mix of personal experience, historical context, and contemporary condemnation of the chain of events that brought Honduras into a state of chaos. She examines events in Honduras following the coup d'état that ousted President Manuel Zelaya in 2009 and the constitutional crisis and regime that followed. Despite the author's lobbying of Congress to influence Honduran policy, the region destabilized and fell into a quag

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