Books > Social sciences > Politics & government > Political activism > Demonstrations & protest movements
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Freedom Summer (Paperback, New ed)
Loot Price: R424
Discovery Miles 4 240
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Freedom Summer (Paperback, New ed)
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Loot Price R424
Discovery Miles 4 240
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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In June 1964, over one thousand volunteers--most of them white,
northern college students--arrived in Mississippi to register black
voters and staff "freedom schools" as part of the Freedom Summer
campaign organized by the Student Non-Violent Coordinating
Committee. Within ten days, three of them were murdered; by the
summer's end, another had died and hundreds more had endured
bombings, beatings, and arrests. Less dramatically, but no less
significantly, the volunteers encountered a "liberating" exposure
to new lifestyles, new political ideologies, and a radically new
perspective on America and on themselves.
Films such as Mississippi Burning have attempted to document this
episode in the civil rights era, but Doug McAdam offers the first
book to gauge the impact of Freedom Summer on the project
volunteers and the period we now call "the turbulent sixties."
Tracking down hundreds of the original project applicants, and
combining hard data with a wealth of personal recollections, he has
produced a riveting portrait of the people, the events, and the
era. McAdam discovered that during Freedom Summer, the volunteers'
encounters with white supremacist violence and their experiences
with interracial relationships, communal living, and a more open
sexuality led many of them to "climb aboard a political and
cultural wave just as it was forming and beginning to wash
forward." Many became activists in subsequent protests--including
the antiwar movement and the feminist movement--and, most
significantly, many of them have remained activists to this
day.
Brimming with the reminiscences of the Freedom Summer veterans,
the book captures the varied motives that compelled them to make
thejourney south, the terror that came with the explosions of
violence, the camaraderie and conflicts they experienced among
themselves, and their assorted feelings about the lessons they
learned.
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