Ed Tant is a writer, public speaker, activist and photographer who lives in Athens, Georgia with his wife Joy and stepdaughter Jamie. An activist since 1968, Ed is a columnist for The Athens Banner-Herald. His writings also have been published in The Progressive, Z magazine, Remember magazine, The Athens Observer, Astronomy magazine, Odyssey children’s magazine, National Comment, the Sinclair Lewis Centennial magazine, The Guardian, The Atlanta Constitution and in the letters sections of The New York Times, The Nation and The Village Voice. He is a volunteer with the Athens Human Rights Festival, a progressive political tradition in the South for over 30 years. As a scribe in Athens since 1974, Ed has traveled more than 50 thousand miles to bring his readers eyewitness accounts of protest marches and rallies in such cities as Washington, New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, Atlanta and other locales.
He also has written on-the-scene coverage of five space shuttle launches at Cape Canaveral, including the first flight in 1981, the first nighttime shuttle launch in 1983 and astronaut John Glenn’s return to space in 1998. In more than three decades as a “participatory journalist,” Ed has interviewed historian Howard Zinn, questioned Henry Kissinger at an Athens press conference, and documented scores of political demonstrations including the protests at both George W. Bush inaugurations in Washington in 2001 and 2005 and at both Bush nominating conventions in Philadelphia in 2000 and in New York in 2004. Ed Tant is the recipient of the Athens/Western Circuit Bar Association’s Media Award for writing about legal issues and he also has been awarded the Athens Human Relations Council’s Martin Luther King Community Service Award. In 2005, Georgia Trend magazine named Ed Tant to its list of “Who’s Who Among Georgia Newspaper Columnists.” Ed’s newspaper columns appear frequently at such Web sites as Smirking Chimp out of New York City and the Neil Rogers radio show’s Web site out of Miami. The late, great, longtime activist Dave Dellinger called Ed Tant “an important revolutionary journalist” and Howard Zinn has called Ed Tant “an Athens treasure.”