Explore popular quotes and sayings by a lecturer Marshall Ganz.
Last updated on November 21, 2024.
Marshall Ganz is the Rita T. Hauser Senior Lecturer in Leadership, Organizing, and Civil Society at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. Introduced to organizing in Civil Rights Movement, he worked on the staff of the United Farm Workers for sixteen years, became trainer and organizer for political campaigns, unions and nonprofit groups, and returned to Harvard where he earned his PhD in Sociology (2000). He is credited with devising the successful grassroots organizing model and training for Barack Obama’s winning 2008 presidential campaign.
A story communicates fear, hope, and anxiety, and because we can feel it, we get the moral not just as a concept, but as a teaching of our hearts. That’s the power of story.
If deep change depended solely on outside intervention it would never happen.
Challenging the status quo takes commitment, courage, imagination, and, above all, dedication to learning.
Abstraction is the enemy of meaning.
When we tell our own story, we teach the values that our choices reveal, not as abstract principals, but as our lived experience. We reveal the kind of person we are to the extent that we let others identify with us.
Young people have an almost biological destiny to be hopeful.
Hope is the belief in the probability of the possible rather than the necessity of the probable.
Movements have narratives. They tell stories, because they are not just about rearranging economics and politics. They also rearrange meaning. And they're not just about redistributing the goods. They're about figuring out what is good.
Storytelling may be what most distinguishes social movements from interest groups.
There's a real sweet spot between challenge and hope - leaders make pathways that keep both firmly in view.