East Side Freedom Library

Co-Conspirator of Justice: The Revolutionary Life of Dr. Alan Berkman, with author Susan Reverby, 3/22/21


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Alan Berkman (1945–2009) was a medical student and doctor who became  radicalized by his experiences at the Wounded Knee takeover, at the  Attica prison uprising, and at health clinics for the poor. He provided covert care to members of revolutionary groups, participated in bombings  of government buildings and was eventually captured and served eight years in some of America’s worst penitentiaries. After his release in  1992, he returned to medical practice and became an HIV/AIDS physician,  teacher, and global health activist. He worked to change U.S. policy, making AIDS treatment more widely available in the global south and  saving millions of lives around the world.  

Using Berkman’s unfinished prison memoir, FBI records, letters, and  hundreds of interviews, Susan Reverby sheds fascinating light on  questions of political violence and revolutionary zeal in her account of  Berkman’s extraordinary transformation from doctor to co-conspirator for justice. Reverby has had a long and productive career in the Women’s & Gender  Studies department at Wellesley College. Her 1987 book, Ordered to  Care: The Dilemma of American Nursing, brought the perspectives of the  “new” labor history to nursing. She continued to explore the American  medical system, editing Tuskegee’s Truths: Rethinking the Tuskegee  Syphilis Study (2000) and writing Examining Tuskegee: The Infamous  Syphilis Study and Its Legacy (2009).  

She will be engaged in conversation with three members of the ESFL community who have read Co-Conspirator for Justice:  

Colette Hyman teaches US History at Winona State University and is the  author of Staging Strikes: Workers’ Theatre and the American Labor  Movement in the 1930s (1997) and Dakota Women’s Work: Creativity,  Culture & Exile (2012).  

Art Serotoff is a long-time anti-racist activist based in south  Minneapolis.  

Sara Olson spent seven years in a California prison for charges related  to her involvement with the Symbionese Liberation Army in the 1970s. She  is an activist with the Women’s Prison Book Project.  

Fred Peterson worked as a bush doctor with Oxfam UK in Zimbabwe in  1981-82. He was a participant in the Twin Cities Committee for the  Liberation of Southern Africa, and worked as an ER doc in St. Paul for  many years.

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East Side Freedom LibraryBy East Side Freedom Library

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