Based on new research and combining multiple scholarly
approaches, these twelve essays tell new stories about the civil
rights movement in the state most resistant to change. Wesley
Hogan, Francoise N. Hamlin, and Michael Vinson Williams raise
questions about how civil rights organizing took place. Three pairs
of essays address African Americans' and whites' stories on
education, religion, and the issues of violence. Jelani Favors and
Robert Luckett analyze civil rights issues on the campuses of
Jackson State University and the University of Mississippi. Carter
Dalton Lyon and Joseph T. Reiff study people who confronted the
question of how their religion related to their possible
involvement in civil rights activism. By studying the Ku Klux Klan
and the Deacons for Defense in Mississippi, David Cunningham and
Akinyele Umoja ask who chose to use violence or to raise its
possibility.
The final three chapters describe some of the consequences and
continuing questions raised by the civil rights movement. Byron
D'Andra Orey analyzes the degree to which voting rights translated
into political power for African American legislators. Chris Myers
Asch studies a Freedom School that started in recent years in the
Mississippi Delta. Emilye Crosby details the conflicting memories
of Claiborne County residents and the parts of the civil rights
movement they recall or ignore.
As a group, the essays introduce numerous new characters and
conundrums into civil rights scholarship, advance efforts to study
African Americans and whites as interactive agents in the complex
stories, and encourage historians to pull civil rights scholarship
closer toward the present."
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