An Organized Life
Mike Honey, a founding faculty member of UW Tacoma, may be retiring, but he will continue building on his legacy of 'telling the story, telling history, telling reality.'
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Mike Honey and Music
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FIrst photo above: Singer, poet and labor organizer John Handcox, left, with Mike Honey on guitar. In 2013, Honey published "Sharecropper's Troubadour: John L. Handcox, the Southern Tenant Farmers' Union and the African American song tradition". Photo courtesy Smithsonian Institution Folkways Recordings.
Second photo above: Pinned to a bulletin board in Mike Honey's office is this photo of Mike Honey and famed folk singer Pete Seeger. Honey first met Seeger in the 1970s. Seeger provided a forward to Honey's history of labor organizer John L. Handcox.
Mike Honey never thought he would be an educator. At one point he considered becoming a professional musician. An older cousin taught Honey how to play the guitar. “I started playing music with him, and he was in Detroit, and he liked this kind of honky tonk music,” said Honey. The budding musician developed an interest in folk music that is still with him today. “Most of those songs are story based,” he said. “So, just by listening to this music you could learn history.” Honey’s skill with the guitar turned into a powerful teaching tool. He regularly brings his guitar to class and play songs that were part of the labor and/or Civil Rights movements. “Students usually like it if you throw something in there that’s different,” he said. You can hear Honey play here.
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Sen. Sherrod Brown Reflects on Mike Honey's Work
In this photo, then-nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson (now U.S. Supreme Court Justice Jackson) is holding a copy of “All Labor Has Dignity,” a collection of Dr. Martin Luther King’s speeches on labor rights and economic justice, edited by Mike Honey.
U.S. Senator Sherrod Brown (D-OH) gave a copy of the book to Jackson when she visited his office as part of the nomination process. Both Sen. Brown and Justice Jackson have a long history of advocating for labor. “I’ve turned to Dr. Honey’s book over and over for guidance and inspiration from Dr. King’s powerful words and ideas about the dignity of work,” said Sen. Brown. “Not enough people understand Dr. King’s relationship with the labor movement, and the deep connection between workers’ rights and Civil Rights. It’s why I give the book to friends and colleagues and people I meet with — when more public servants learn this history, we get a more pro-worker government.”