Co-conspirator for Justice

The Revolutionary Life of Dr. Alan Berkman

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Pub Date Jun 08 2020 | Archive Date May 29 2020

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Description

Alan Berkman (1945–2009) was no campus radical in the mid-1960s; he was a promising Ivy League student, football player, Eagle Scout, and fraternity president. But when he was a medical student and doctor, his politics began to change, and soon he was providing covert care to members of revolutionary groups like the Weather Underground and becoming increasingly radicalized by his experiences at the Wounded Knee takeover, at the Attica Prison uprising, and at health clinics for the poor. When the government went after him, he went underground and participated in bombings of government buildings. He was eventually captured and served eight years in some of America's worst penitentiaries, barely surviving two rounds of cancer. After his release in 1992, he returned to medical practice and became an HIV/AIDS physician, teacher, and global health activist. In the final years of his life, he successfully 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 M. 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.

Susan M. Reverby is the Marion Butler McLean Professor Emerita in the History of Ideas and Professor Emerita of Women’s and Gender Studies at Wellesley College. She is the author of Examining Tuskegee: The Infamous Syphilis Study and Its Legacy.

Alan Berkman (1945–2009) was no campus radical in the mid-1960s; he was a promising Ivy League student, football player, Eagle Scout, and fraternity president. But when he was a medical student and...


Advance Praise

"In the 1970s, some people drifted into medicine as a career choice. Others, like Dr. Alan Berkman, saw it as a deep moral commitment to make medical care available to all, even if it took a revolution to achieve. I argued with people like Alan, but never really understood them until I read Susan Reverby's powerful and compassionate biography."--Barbara Ehrenreich, author of Nickel and Dimed

"In the 1970s, some people drifted into medicine as a career choice. Others, like Dr. Alan Berkman, saw it as a deep moral commitment to make medical care available to all, even if it took a...


Available Editions

EDITION Hardcover
ISBN 9781469656250
PRICE $30.00 (USD)

Average rating from 3 members


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