Photographs by Allan Sekula

This is movement reporting on a par with Norman Mailer’s Armies of the Night. — Peter Linebaugh

It’s been called the most intense popular uprising since the protests against the Vietnam War. In October 1999, fifty thousand citizens occupied the streets in a successful effort to shut the World Trade Organization’s ministerial meeting. Trade unionists, environmentalists, human rights advocates and farmers converged on Seattle to denounce the new global economy. Street corners were occupied by irate French farmers, Earth First!ers locked themselves to hotel doors to prevent WTO delegates from exiting, the convention center was circled by a human chain, and black-clad anarchists roamed the streets, smashing the windows of Gap, Niketown, and the Bank of America. The Seattle cops responded fiercely, saturating the air with tear gas, attacking demonstrators with riot clubs, rubber bullets, and pepper spray. The street battle raged for three days. Six hundred people were arrested, held without lawyers at a local military base. But when the smoke and gas cleared, the protesters had prevailed: the WTO talks had collapsed.

Five Days That Shook the World takes you onto the streets of Seattle with on-the-spot reporting and photographs. But it also looks at the broader issues raised by the protest: the secretive and undemocratic practice of the WTO, the trampling on rights to assembly and free speech by deploying the military to put down protest, and the menace to individual liberties of globalization and offshore government.

Alexander Cockburn is a columnist for The Nation and New York Press. He is the author of Corruptions of Empire, The Golden Age Is In Us, and Washington Babylon (with Ken Silverstein). Jeffrey St. Clair has written for The Nation and is the publisher of Wild Forest Review. Together they edit the muckraking newsletter Counterpunch. Also from Verso are their books Whiteout: The CIA, Drugs and the Press, Al Gore: A User’s Manual, and Imperial Crusades.

“Without writers like Cockburn and St. Clair, and publishers like Verso, the official version is the only one that survives.” — LA Weekly on Whiteout


Publication
November 2000

144 pages

Paper
ISBN-13: 978 1 85984 779 4
US$20 / £12 / CAN$28




Also available:

Whiteout: The CIA, Drugs and the Press

The Golden Age Is In Us

Corruptions of Empire: Life Studies & The Reagan Era

High Water Everywhere:
New Orleans and the Shame of America



Forthcoming
The Death of Liberal America