There were many little-known challenges to racial segregation
before the landmark Supreme Court decision in Brown v. Board of
Education (1954). The author 's oral history interviews highlight
civil rights protests seldom considered significant, but that help
us understand the beginnings of the civil rights struggle before it
became a mass movement. She brings to light many important but
largely forgotten events, such as the often overlooked 1950s
Oklahoma sit-in protests that provided a model for the better-known
Greensboro, North Carolina, sit-ins.This book 's significance lies
in its challenge to perspectives that dominate scholarship on the
civil rights movement. The broader concepts illustrated including
agency, culture, social structure, and situations throughout this
book open up substantially more of the complexity of the civil
rights struggle. This book employs a methodology for analyzing not
just the civil rights movement but other social movements and,
indeed, social change in general.
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