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Year 119 – 1979: The Twilight Zine, Journal of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Science Fiction Society: numbers 31-32

Published: Cambridge, Mass., 1979 The Oxford English Dictionary defines “fanzine” as “a magazine for fans, esp. those of science fiction.” One thing the OED definition leaves out, though, is the fact that fanzines are as much by fans as for fans. MIT’s Twilight Zine fits this expanded definition to a “t”: it’s produced by MITSFS, the MIT Science Fiction Society. Fanzine is a portmanteau term combining “fanatic” and “magazine.” It first appeared in the early 1940s to describe the many amateur publications that were being written, illustrated, and printed by fans of science fiction. They were usually copied as cheaply […]

Year 118 – 1978: Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston

Published: Urbana, Ill., 1978 It’s difficult to hear the story of Zora Neale Hurston’s life without succumbing to feelings of sorrow and frustration. Had she written nothing except the magnificent 1937 novel Their Eyes Were Watching God, Hurston would merit a place on any list of important American writers. But she did publish a good deal more, and much of it was brilliant. Nonetheless, the year 1959 found Hurston, a woman of color by then approaching old age, writing in longhand to Harper & Brothers, asking them please to consider a book she was completing. In the 1972 critical anthology […]

Year 117 – 1977: Alaska Crude: Visions of the Last Frontier (photographs by Marcus Halevi, text by Kenneth Andrasko)

Published:  Boston, 1977 North America’s largest oil field was discovered in Prudhoe Bay on Alaska’s North Slope in 1968, just 9 years into Alaska’s statehood. The discovery unleashed a heated environmental, legal, and political debate unprecedented in the state’s brief history. It took the shock of the 1973 oil embargo – and the accompanying sharp rise in crude oil prices – to clear a legislative path that would enable oil drilling, and ultimately, the construction of the Trans-Alaska Pipeline. Stretching 800 miles, from north to south coasts, the pipeline took less than four years to build. As people flooded into […]

Year 116 – 1976: Carrie directed by Brian De Palma and written by Lawrence D. Cohen

Theatrical release: November 3, 1976 It’s an iconic scene: Sissy Spacek as Carrie White, dressed in satin of the palest pink, has just been named Prom Queen. As she accepts the award, a smile lights up her face. Suddenly a bucket of pig’s blood showers over her, drenching her in red. All hell literally breaks loose as Carrie uses her telekinetic powers to wreak vengeance on the entire school. Today, Carrie is considered one of the finest horror movies ever made. It shocked audiences, was a box office smash, and earned Academy Award nominations for both Spacek and Piper Laurie, […]

Year 115 – 1975: The Dictionary of Misinformation by Tom Burnam

Published: New York, 1975 Science uncovers truths by testing theories or predictions in trials that can be replicated, and at MIT, science is king. But in the wider world, misinformation runs rampant. Familiar phrases are often actually misquotes that have been repeated so often that the authentic, original wording sounds strange and incorrect. In a similar vein, common fallacies and misperceptions about the world around us influence choices we make in our daily lives. In his Dictionary of Misinformation, Tom Burnam has set out to correct some of these inaccuracies and false beliefs. Among the falsehoods exposed in this book: […]

Year 114 – 1974: Aiiieeeee! An Anthology of Asian-American Writers edited by Frank Chin, Jeffery Paul Chan, Lawson Fusao Inada, and Shawn Hsu Wong

Published: Washington, D.C., 1974 In 1973, there was no such thing as “Asian American literature.” It was not a category discussed by scholars, much less a genre known by writers, booksellers, and the reading public. Then came Aiiieeeee!, published by the Howard University Press in 1974. The title, a reappropriation of the stereotypical scream of “the yellow man” depicted in popular “white American culture,” was meant to represent the cry of “Asian America, so long ignored and forcibly excluded from participation in American culture.” The editors were four young writers and intellectuals who decided to reclaim the work of fellow […]

Year 113 – 1973: Our Bodies, Ourselves by the Boston Women’s Health Book Collective

Published: New York, 1973 At first glance, someone might wonder why the MIT Libraries haven’t withdrawn this ancient-looking volume. The paper it was printed on is cheap, and turning brown and brittle. The photos and drawings are black and white; most were provided by members of the Boston Women’s Health Collective and their friends. The book has that homemade “Sixties and Seventies look.” The front cover of this first edition bears a large black and white photograph of three women holding a handwritten sign that says, “Women Unite.” They’re not alone but are part of a demonstration in the early […]

Year 112 – 1972: Papers on the War by Daniel Ellsberg

Published: New York, 1972 Daniel Ellsberg began working for the RAND Corporation as a decisionmaking/policy consultant in 1959. In the mid-1960s he moved to the U.S. Defense Department and the Department of State, and spent two years in Vietnam observing the war. In 1967 he returned to RAND and began working on a study, sponsored by Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara, on the escalation of the war and U.S. decisionmaking in Vietnam from 1945 to 1968. The report, later to be known as the “Pentagon Papers,” revealed that Congress and the American public had been misinformed repeatedly about the actual […]

Year 111 – 1971: The Classical Style: Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven by Charles Rosen

Published: New York, 1971 Charles Rosen’s The Classical Style won the 1972 National Book Award in Arts and Letters. It has since become a standard text – perhaps the definitive text – on the three great masters of the classical style, as well as on the style itself. Rosen is remarkable both for his erudition and for the clarity and elegance of his writing. But he didn’t begin his career authoring book-length works. For Rosen isn’t just an important scholar. He’s also a celebrated pianist – he completed his studies at Juilliard at the age of eleven. He earned his […]

Year 98 – 1958: Stride Toward Freedom: The Montgomery Story by Martin Luther King, Jr.

Published: New York, 1958 Young people today might have difficulty actually believing what daily life was like for people of color in the segregated South as recently as 50-odd years ago. Assaults on individual dignity were wide-ranging and ubiquitous. A case in point: the public bus system in Montgomery, Alabama in the 1950s. In Stride Toward Freedom, Martin Luther King, Jr. writes: Even if the bus had no white passengers, [but was] packed throughout, [black passengers] were prohibited from sitting in the first four seats (which held ten persons). The indignities didn’t stop there. Upon boarding, people of color had […]