TY - BOOK AU - Horton,Myles AU - Kohl,Judith AU - Kohl,Herbert R. AU - Moyers,Bill TI - The long haul: an autobiography SN - 0385263139 : AV - LC5301 .M65 H69 1990 U1 - 374/.9768/092 19 PY - 1990/// CY - New York PB - Doubleday KW - Horton, Myles, KW - Highlander Folk School (Monteagle, Tenn.) KW - History KW - School administrators KW - Tennessee KW - Biography KW - Adult education KW - Educational sociology KW - Social change KW - United States N1 - Includes name index; One. Beginnings -- Two. College -- Three. Learning -- Four. Union Theological Seminary -- Five. From Chicago to Denmark -- Six. The beginnings of Highlander -- Seven. Rhythm -- Eight. Working as an organizer -- Nine. Reading to vote: the citizenship schools -- Ten. Charisma -- Eleven. Islands of decency -- Twelve. Workshops -- Thirteen. Taking it home -- Fourteen. A growing idea -- Fifteen. One battle, many fronts -- Sixteen. Knowing yourself -- Seventeen. Learning from the birds -- Eighteen. Nicaragua -- Nineteen. Who really owns the land? -- Twenty. Many Highlanders -- Twenty-One. The future N2 - "In 1932, Myles Horton founded the Highlander Folk School in Monteagle, Tennessee, and a new kind of social activism was born. Himself a poor boy from the Appalachian Mountains, Horton created an adult education center dedicated to helping people solve problems and conflicts — social, economic, political — by mining their own experience and awareness. In his own direct, modest, plain-spoken style, Horton tells the story of Highlander, which is really the story of American social history over the last sixty years. From the labor uprisings of the 1930s, through the civil rights movement of the 1950s and '60s, to the present day, the school has remained a powerful and controversial presence. Here Rosa Parks studied and was inspired to her own historic act. Here, too, came Martin Luther King, Jr., Pete Seeger, Eleanor Roosevelt, and others. Filled with disarmingly honest insight, as well as gentle humor and a profound respect for human dignity, The Long Haul is an inspiring hymn to the possibility of social change, as well as a deeply affecting testament to the power of people to triumph over injustice and inequality. It is the story of Myles Horton, in his own words: the wise and moving recollections of a man of uncommon determination and vision." -- from the dust jacket ER -