Dreadful Conversions: The Making of a Catholic Socialist

Front Cover
Fordham Univ Press, 2003 - Biography & Autobiography - 355 pages
For more than 50 years, John Cort has been at the center of most of the social movements of our time. Writer, reporter, teacher, activist, Cort has spent his life fighting good fights, whether on a Boston newspaper, with the Peace Corps in the Philippines, as a labor leader, or in dozens of campaigns for justice, peace and human rights. Here is John Cort's story--the measure of an exemplary life and a vivid, personal chronicle of American radicalism across virtually every major struggle. At its heart, this is also the story of what it means to take seriously the distinctively radical Catholic vision that informs American political and religious life in this century. It started in 1935, when Cort converted to Catholicism as a Harvard undergraduate. A year later, he was in New York City on the staff of the Catholic Worker, working with such legendary figures as Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin. Plunged into the class wars of the Depression, Cort began a 20-year commitment to organizing workers, notably through the Association of Catholic Trade Unionists. Later, Cort served many social action causes while continuing to teach, report, and write. Whether running a model Cities program, a newspaper guild, or a homeless shelter, or as a delegate to a world apostolic congress, Cort brought to life in his radicalism and his socialism the teachings of Catholic activism embodied most vividly by Dorothy Day and John XIII. Desperate Conversions is a unique primer in Catholic social theory, told in the chapters of John Cort's own life. Quirky, personal, distinctive, his memoir captures one of the great stories of our American century--and tells it in a voice no one can forget.
 

Contents

Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin
1
The Labor Movement
23
Flashback Home
36
Flashback School Days
47
Flashback The Bizarre Conversion
57
The ACTU and the CIO
76
Racketeers and Kennedys
105
Flashback Time to Think
128
The Miracle of Good Pope John
185
First and Last Hurrahs
201
Pursuing Peace in the Philippines
217
Making War on Poverty I
231
The Black Experience
244
Making War on Poverty II
274
How the Females Put an End to Male Oppression
284
The Second Conversion
296

The ACTU and the Stalinists
144
The Virgin Business Agent
174
Final Conversations and Quotations
318
Copyright

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About the author (2003)

John C. Cort, born in 1912, grew up on Long Island, NY. A widely published author. His Christian Socialism: An Informal History is acclaimed as the definitive account. The father of ten children and 14 grandchildren, he lives with his wife Helen Haye Cort in Nahant, Massachusetts.