In his Justice, Nature & the Geography of Difference, geographer David Harvey states that "we have much to learn from our predecessors, particularly those who worked in the latter part of the last century, for their political and intellectual courage cannot be doubted." My intellectual biography of Alexander Saxton follows Harvey's lead and situates Saxton's work as a writer, political activist, and historian in the tradition of humane radicals who have struggled to create a just society.
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Copyright 2004 The Pacific Coast Branch, American Historical Association
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