Abstrakt: |
The article discusses the complex social and political milieu in which homegrown dissent at Ohio's Kent State University has developed. It highlights the story of the student movement of the university by way of a traditional chronological narrative that begins with a 1958 campaign waged by Ohio labor against a right-to-work amendment. Kent's activist students are said to be understood as political and cultural agents, rather than as victims or lawbreakers, through the prism of economic class. |