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"Contributes[s] interesting new dimensions to the literature on
Jews and blacks in the United States."
--"The Journal of American History"
"A fascinating text which adds to our understanding of recent
Jewish Left and feminist politics and activism"
"--Australian Jewish News, Aug. 2001"
"Blending together 15 oral histories and archival research,
Schultz shows how northern Jewish women's commitment to social
justice - informed in part by living in the shadow of the Holocaust
- played out in a time of enormous political, social, and personal
upheaval...Sharply observant of her informants' lives, Schultz
opens a new window not only into the civil rights movement but also
into the sociology of mid-century Jewish-American culture. Her
analysis is most impressive at the book's end, when she
perceptively describes the protean nature of Jewish identities in
the U.S. Such insightful cultural readings and criticism make this
a fine contribution to both the literature of the civil rights
movement and the field of Jewish studies."
"--Publishers Weekly"
"Schultz's book makes a substantial contribution to feminist
scholarship, but in the end it is also a call to renewed action -
to never forget the sacrifices of previous generations."
--"The Journal of Southern History"
"A well-written, serious, and important book. I learned a great
deal from this interesting and rich study."
"--Joyce Antler, author of The Journey Home: How Jewish Women
Shaped Modern America"
""Going South" is a heartfelt plea for incorporating women's
activism into social movement history."
--Linn Shapiro, "American Jewish History"
"Going South is aremarkable book, reflecting the experiences of
fifteen women who joined the 1960s civil rights movement showing
how and why they got there, what role, if any religion played in
their lives, and what happened to them afterwards."
--"Journal of American Studies"
"The strength of the book is that it is based on interviews; the
reader is introduced to each women, her family, the work she
performed in the South, the people she met and the difficulties she
overcame while there."--"Jewish Observer"
Many people today know that the 1964 murder in Mississippi of
two Jewish men--Mickey Schwerner and Andrew Goodman--and their
Black colleague, James Chaney, marked one of the most wrenching
episodes of the civil rights movement. Yet very few realize that
Andrew Goodman had been in Mississippi for one day when he was
killed; Rita Schwerner, Mickey's wife, had been organizing in
Mississippi for six difficult months.
Organized around a rich blend of oral histories, Going South
followsa group of Jewish women--come of age in the shadow of the
Holocaust and deeply committed to social justice--who put their
bodies and lives on the line to fight racism. Actively rejecting
the post-war idyll of suburban, Jewish, middle-class life, these
women were deeply influenced by Jewish notions of morality and
social justice. Many thus perceived the call of the movement as
positively irresistible.
Representing a link between the sensibilities of the early civil
rights era and contemporary efforts to move beyond the limits of
identity politics, the book provides a resource for all who are
interested in anti-racism, the civil rights movement, social
justice, Jewish activism and radical women's traditions.
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