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A Slow, Calculated Lynching - The Story of Clyde Kennard (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R868
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A Slow, Calculated Lynching - The Story of Clyde Kennard (Hardcover)
Series: Race, Rhetoric, and Media Series
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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In the years following Brown v. Board of Education, countless Black
citizens endured violent resistance and even death while fighting
for their constitutional rights. One of those citizens, Clyde
Kennard (1927-1963), a Korean War veteran and civil rights leader
from Hattiesburg, Mississippi, attempted repeatedly to enroll at
the all-white Mississippi Southern College-now the University of
Southern Mississippi-in the late 1950s. In A Slow, Calculated
Lynching: The Story of Clyde Kennard, Devery S. Anderson tells the
story of a man who paid the ultimate price for trying to attend a
white college during Jim Crow. Rather than facing conventional
vigilantes, he stood opposed to the governor, the Mississippi State
Sovereignty Commission, and other high-ranking entities willing to
stop at nothing to deny his dreams. In this comprehensive and
extensively researched biography, Anderson examines the relentless
subterfuge against Kennard, including the cruelly successful
attempts to frame him-once for a misdemeanor and then for a felony.
This second conviction resulted in a sentence of seven years hard
labor at Mississippi State Penitentiary, forever disqualifying him
from attending a state-sponsored school. While imprisoned, he
developed cancer, was denied care, then sadly died six months after
the governor commuted his sentence. In this prolonged lynching,
Clyde Kennard was robbed of his ambitions and ultimately his life,
but his final days and legacy reject the notion that he was
powerless. Anderson highlights the resolve of friends and fellow
activists to posthumously restore his name. Those who fought
against him, and later for him, link a story of betrayal and
redemption, chronicling the worst and best in southern race
relations. The redemption was not only a symbolic one for Kennard
but proved healing for the entire state. He was gone, but countless
others still benefit from Kennard's legacy and the biracial,
bipartisan effort he inspired.
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