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We Shall Overcome - Press Photographs of Nashville during the Civil Rights Era (Paperback)
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We Shall Overcome - Press Photographs of Nashville during the Civil Rights Era (Paperback)
Series: In Collaboration with Frist Art Museum
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Named One of the "Best Art Books of 2018" by the New York Times
Fifty years after Martin Luther King Jr.'s death-and at a time when
race relations and social justice are again at the forefront of our
country's consciousness-this book expands on a Frist Art Museum
exhibition to present a selection of approximately one hundred
photographs that document an important period in Nashville's
struggle for racial equality. The images were taken between 1957,
the year that desegregation in public schools began, and 1968, when
the National Guard was called in to surround the state capitol in
the wake of the civil rights leader's assassination in Memphis. Of
central significance are photographs of lunch counter sit-ins in
early 1960, led by a group of students, including John Lewis (who
contributed the book's foreword) and Diane Nash, from local
historically black colleges and universities. The demonstrations
were so successful that King stated just a few weeks later at Fisk
University: "I did not come to Nashville to bring inspiration but
to gain inspiration from the great movement that has taken place in
this community." The role that Nashville played in the national
civil rights movement as a hub for training students in nonviolent
protest and as the first Southern city to integrate places of
business is a story that warrants reexamination. The book also
provides an opportunity to consider the role of images and the
media in shaping public opinion, a relevant subject in today's
news-saturated climate. Photographs from the archives of both daily
newspapers are included: the Tennessean, which was the more liberal
publication, and the Nashville Banner, a conservative paper whose
leadership seemed less interested in covering events related to
racial issues. Some of the photographs in the exhibition had been
selected to be published in the papers, but many were not, and
their disclosure reveals insight into the editorial process. In
several images, other photojournalists and news crews are visible,
serving as a reminder of the almost constant presence of the camera
during these historic times. Essays by Linda Wynn of Fisk
University and the Tennessee Historical Commission and Susan H.
Edwards, executive director of the Frist Art Museum, offer
historical context on Nashville during the civil rights era and on
photojournalism, respectively. Congressman John Lewis's foreword
recounts memories of his time in Nashville and reminds us that
there is still work to be done to build King's Beloved Community.
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