Joe Moakley's Journey: From South Boston to El Salvador

Joe Moakley's Journey: From South Boston to El Salvador

by Mark Robert Schneider
Joe Moakley's Journey: From South Boston to El Salvador

Joe Moakley's Journey: From South Boston to El Salvador

by Mark Robert Schneider

eBook

$18.99  $24.99 Save 24% Current price is $18.99, Original price is $24.99. You Save 24%.

Available on Compatible NOOK Devices and the free NOOK Apps.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers


Overview

In November 1989 in El Salvador, six Jesuit priests and their two female housekeepers were rousted from their beds and shot as they lay face down on the ground. At first, the George H. W. Bush administration echoed the Salvadoran military’s line that the rebels must have done it. When House Speaker Tom Foley tasked a senior congressman with investigating the murders, the people of El Salvador found an unlikely champion in the person of John Joseph Moakley, representative from South Boston. In Joe Moakley’s Journey, Mark Robert Schneider charts one of the most unusual transformations in American politics. A native son of South Boston, Moakley was an effective and influential House member, whose greatest influence and legacy is, paradoxically, far from home in the fields of El Salvador and Central America. Though firmly, fiercely grounded in his hometown of South Boston—he never lived anywhere else—from the beginning of this investigation until his death in 2001, issues of Central American justice, peace, and economic development became Joe Moakley’s cause.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781555538088
Publisher: Northeastern University Press
Publication date: 12/12/2013
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 320
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

MARK ROBERT SCHNEIDER is adjunct professor of history at Suffolk University in Boston, and author of African Americans in the Jazz Age, “We Return Fighting,” and Boston Confronts Jim Crow.

Table of Contents

Preface: A Regular Joe
Acknowledgments
Chronicle of a Death Foretold
Southie Was His Hometown
From Curley’s Boston to Kennedy’s America
The Invisible, the Blind, and the Visionary
Moakley versus Hicks
The Man on the Barbed Wire Fence
The Last Days of the Working Class
Into Foreign Lands
A Most Unlikely Hero
The Jesuit Murders
“Wellcom Senador Smoklin”
Death and Resurrection
Return to Santa Marta
Man of the Century
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index

What People are Saying About This

U.S. Rep. Jim McGovern

“Mark Schneider has written a wonderful book about an extraordinary man. Joe Moakley’s life was dedicated to helping people—especially the most vulnerable. He had a big heart and a spine of steel. He demonstrated that politics could be an honorable profession, and I miss him.”

James M. O'Toole

"They don't make congressmen like Joe Moakley any more—devoted to their constituents and equally devoted to larger causes of social justice. Schneider's book brings Moakley and his times vividly back to life."

Jack Spence

“This is considerably more than an account of Joseph Moakley’s life; it is really also a reflection, through that life, of key aspects of twentieth-century US history and politics: immigration early and late, urban neighborhood politics, key national political issues, and important perspectives on foreign policy.”

From the Publisher

"This is considerably more than an account of Joseph Moakley's life; it is really also a reflection, through that life, of key aspects of twentieth-century US history and politics: immigration early and late, urban neighborhood politics, key national political issues, and important perspectives on foreign policy." —Jack Spence, University of Massachusetts–Boston

"Mark Schneider has written a wonderful book about an extraordinary man. Joe Moakley's life was dedicated to helping people—especially the most vulnerable. He had a big heart and a spine of steel. He demonstrated that politics could be an honorable profession, and I miss him." —U.S. Rep. Jim McGovern

"They don't make congressmen like Joe Moakley any more—devoted to their constituents and equally devoted to larger causes of social justice. Schneider's book brings Moakley and his times vividly back to life."—James M. O'Toole, Clough Chair in History, Boston College

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews