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The Brown Decision, Jim Crow, and Southern Identity (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R875
Discovery Miles 8 750
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The Brown Decision, Jim Crow, and Southern Identity (Hardcover)
Series: Mercer University Lamar Memorial Lectures
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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A spirited defense of the landmark civil rights case and its place
in our history. The 1954 Brown v. Board of Education ruling was a
watershed event in the fight against racial segregation in the
United States. The recent fiftieth anniversary of Brown prompted a
surge of tributes: books, television and radio specials,
conferences, and speeches. At the same time, says James C. Cobb, it
revealed a growing trend of dismissiveness and negativity toward
Brown and other accomplishments of the civil rights movement.
Writing as both a lauded historian and a white southerner from the
last generation to grow up under southern apartheid, Cobb responds
to what he sees as distortions of Brown's legacy and their implied
disservice to those whom it inspired and empowered. Cobb begins by
looking at how our historical understanding of segregation has
evolved since the Brown decision. In particular, he targets the
tenacious misconception that racial discrimination was at odds with
economic modernization - and so would have faded out, on its own,
under market pressures. He then looks at the argument that Brown
energized white resistance more than it fomented civil rights
progress. This position overstates the pace and extent of racial
change in the South prior to Brown, Cobb says, while it understates
Brown's role in catalyzing and legitimizing subsequent black
protest. Finally, Cobb suggests that the Brown decree and the civil
rights movement accomplished not only more than certain critics
have acknowledged but also more than the hard statistics of black
progress can reveal. The destruction of Jim Crow, with its ""denial
of belonging,"" allowed African Americans to embrace their identity
as southerners in ways that freed them to explore links between
their southernness and their blackness. This is an important and
timely reminder of ""what the Brown court and the activists who
took the spirit of its ruling into the streets were up against,
both historically and contemporaneously.
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