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The Desegregation of Public Libraries in the Jim Crow South - Civil Rights and Local Activism (Hardcover)
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The Desegregation of Public Libraries in the Jim Crow South - Civil Rights and Local Activism (Hardcover)
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In The Desegregation of Public Libraries in the Jim Crow South,
Wayne A. and Shirley A. Wiegand tell the comprehensive story of the
integration of southern public libraries. As in other efforts to
integrate civic institutions in the 1950s and 1960s, the
determination of local activists won the battle against segregation
in libraries. In particular, the willingness of young black
community members to take part in organized protests and direct
actions ensured that local libraries would become genuinely free to
all citizens. The Wiegands trace the struggle for equal access to
the years before the Supreme Court's Brown v. Board of Education
decision, when black activists in the South focused their efforts
on equalizing accommodations, rather than on the more daunting- and
dangerous- task of undoing segregation. After the ruling, momentum
for vigorously pursuing equality grew, and black organizations
shifted to more direct challenges to the system, including public
library sit-ins and lawsuits against library systems. Although
local groups often took direction from larger civil rights
organizations, the energy, courage, and determination of younger
black community members ensured the eventual desegregation of Jim
Crow public libraries. The Wiegands examine the library
desegregation movement in several southern cities and states,
revealing the ways that individual communities negotiated- mostly
peacefully, sometimes violently- the integration of local public
libraries. This study adds a new chapter to the history of civil
rights activism in the mid-twentieth century and celebrates the
resolve of community activists as it weaves the account of racial
discrimination in public libraries through the national narrative
of the civil rights movement.
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