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Crossing the Line - Women's Interracial Activism in South Carolina during and after World War II (Paperback)
Loot Price: R695
Discovery Miles 6 950
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Crossing the Line - Women's Interracial Activism in South Carolina during and after World War II (Paperback)
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Total price: R705
Discovery Miles: 7 050
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Although they were accustomed to a segregated society, many women
in South Carolina - both black and white, both individually and
collectively - worked to change their state's unequal racial status
quo. In this volume, Cherisse Jones-Branch explores the early
activism of black women in organizations including the NAACP, the
South Carolina Progressive Democratic Party, and the South Carolina
Federation of Colored Women's Clubs. At the same time, she
discusses the involvement of white women in such groups as the YWCA
and Church Women United. Their agendas often conflicted and their
attempts at interracial activism were often futile, but these black
and white women had the same goal: to improve black South
Carolinians' access to political and educational institutions.
Examining the tumultuous years during and after World War II,
Jones-Branch contends that these women are the unsung heroes of
South Carolina's civil rights history. Their efforts to cross the
racial divide in South Carolina helped set the groundwork for the
broader civil rights movement of the 1960s and 1970s.
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