The new civil rights movement reader: resistance, resilience, and justice
"In the United States, the fight to secure full civil rights for African American people has endured for centuries. The movement has included many voices, among them, working people, charismatic activists, musicians and artists, the LGBTQIA community, veterans, suburbanites, and elected officia...
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Format: | Buch |
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Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Amherst
University of Massachusetts Press
[2023]
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Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis Klappentext |
Zusammenfassung: | "In the United States, the fight to secure full civil rights for African American people has endured for centuries. The movement has included many voices, among them, working people, charismatic activists, musicians and artists, the LGBTQIA community, veterans, suburbanites, and elected officials. Moving from the labor struggles of the 1930s to the sit-ins and boycotts of midcentury, and the Black Lives Matter protests of today, this expansive volume brings together first-person accounts, political documents and speeches, and historical photographs from each region of the country. Designed for use in courses and engaging for general readers, this new compilation is the most diverse, most inclusive, and most comprehensive resource available for teaching and learning about the civil rights movement. With chronological and geographical depth, The New Civil Rights Movement Reader addresses a range of key topics, including youth activism, regional and local freedom struggles, voting rights, economic inequality, gender, sexuality, and culture, and the movement's global reach"-- |
Beschreibung: | xv, 387 Seiten Illustrationen 26 cm |
ISBN: | 9781625346896 |
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adam_text | CONTENTS List of Figures ix Preface xi Preface for Students Introduction xiii i Chapter 1: Labor and Civil Rights in the 1930s 7 DOCUMENT 1.1. “Race Loses Jobs to Whites” (1931) DOCUMENT 1.2. “Don’t Buy Where You Can’t Work” Demonstration (1941) DOCUMENT 1.3. Attorney Samuel Leibowitz with the Scottsboro Boys (ca. 1933) DOCUMENT 1.4. Angelo Herndon, The Scottsboro Boys (1937) DOCUMENT 1.5. Nate Shaw Discusses Sharecropping (1974) DOCUMENT 1.6. Southern Tenant Farmers Union (1937) DOCUMENT 1.7. A. Philip Randolph, “The Pullman Company and the Pullman Porter” (1925) DOCUMENT 1.8. Mary McLeod Bethune, “What Does Democracy Mean to Me?” (1939) Further Reading 8 10 11 12 15 17 18 21 22 Chapter 2: World War II 24 DOCUMENT 2.1. A. Philip Randolph, “The Call to Negro America to March on Washington” (1941) DOCUMENT 2.2. “Executive Order 8802: Prohibition of Discrimination in the Defense Industry” 25 (1941) DOCUMENT 2.3. James G. Thompson, “Should I Sacrifice to Live ‘Half-American?’ Suggest Double VV for Double Victory against Axis Forces and Ugly Prejudices on the Home Front” (1942) DOCUMENT 2.4. Double V Campaign Emblem (ca. 1942) DOCUMENT 2.5. Pauli Murray, “Jim Crow in the Nation’s Capital” (1987) DOCUMENT 2.6. Billboard Protesting Black Occupancy of the Sojourner Truth Homes (1942) DOCUMENT 2.7. Ruth Miller, El Segundo Plant of the Douglas Aircraft Company (ca. 1939--1944) DOCUMENT 2.8. Brigadier General Benjamin O. Davis Watches a Signal Corps Crew Erecting Poles (1944) DOCUMENT 2.9. Lieutenant Colonel Harold Brown on Being a Tuskegee Airman (2010) DOCUMENT 2.10. Executive
Order 9981 Desegregates Armed Forces (1948) 28 Further Reading 30 32 33 37 38 39 40 45 46 Chapter 3: Galvanizing the Movement in the 1950s 48 DOCUMENT3.1. Smith v. Allwright Decision. (1944) DOCUMENT 3.2. Shelley v. Kraemer Decision (1948) DOCUMENT 3.3. George Houser and Bayard Rustin, CORE, “We Challenged Jim Crow!” (1947) DOCUMENT 3.4. Jackie Robinson Breaks the Color Barrier (1947) DOCUMENT 3.5. Thurgood Marshall’s Argument before the Supreme Court in Brown v. Board ofEducation (1954) DOCUMENT 3.6. Brown v. Board of Education Decision (1954) DOCUMENT 3.7. Southern Manifesto (1956) DOCUMENT 3.8. The Chicago Defender on the Emmett Till Murder (1955) DOCUMENT 3.9. Emmett Till with His Mother, Mamie Till-Mobley (ca. 1950) 51 53 56 59 60 62 65 68 69
DOCUMENT 3.10. Rosa Parks Recalls the Montgomery Bus Boycott (1977) DOCUMENT 3.11. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s Speech at Holt Street Baptist Church (1955) DOCUMENT 3.12. The Little Rock Nine and Daisy Bates (1957) DOCUMENT 3.13. Melba Pattillo Beals on Integrating Central High School (1994) Further Reading 70 72 75 76 79 Chapter 4: Youth Activism in the Early 1960s 80 DOCUMENT 4.1. David Richmond, Franklin McCain, Ezell Blair, and Joseph McNeil Are Seen Leaving the Woolworth Store (i960) 82 DOCUMENT 4.2. Anne Moody’s Involvement in Student Demonstrations in Jackson, Mississippi (1963) 83 DOCUMENT 4.3. Anne Moody, Joan Trumpauer, and John Salter Sit in at a Jackson Restaurant (1963) 86 DOCUMENT 4.4. Diane Nash, “Speech at National Catholic Conference for Interracial Justice” (1961) 87 DOCUMENT 4.5. Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, “Statement of Purpose” (i960) 91 DOCUMENT 4.6. Ella Baker,“Bigger than a Hamburger” (i960) 92 DOCUMENT 4.7. Mug Shots of Freedom Riders C. T. Vivian, Mary Hamilton, and Jean Thompson (1961) 94 DOCUMENT 4.8. James Meredith, “I Can’t Fight Alone” (1963) 95 Further Reading 97 Chapter 5: Local Struggles 99 DOCUMENT 5.1. Robert F. Williams, “Can Negroes Afford to Be Pacifists?” (1959) DOCUMENT 5.2. Septima Poinsette Clark on Organizing Citizenship Schools (1976) DOCUMENT 5.3. Charles Sherrod on the Albany Movement (2011) DOCUMENT 5.4. “Letter from the Albany Movement to the Albany City Commission” (1962) DOCUMENT 5.5. Gloria Richardson, “Focus on Cambridge” (1964) DOCUMENT 5.6. “Birmingham Manifesto” (1963) DOCUMENT 5.7. Martin Luther King
Jr., “Letter from Birmingham Jail” (1963) DOCUMENT 5.8. Police in Birmingham, Ala., Take a Group ofBlack Schoolchildren to Jail (1963) DOCUMENT 5.9. Charles Sims on the Deacons for Defense (1965) Further Reading 100 104 107 109 111 115 116 122 123 126 Chapter 6: The Struggles for Voting and Political Power in Mississippi and Alabama 127 DOCUMENT 6.1. Medgår Evers, Address at Mount Heron Baptist Church (1957) DOCUMENT 6.2. Missing Poster of Andrew Goodman, James Chaney, and Michael Schwerner (1964) DOCUMENT 6.3. Bob Moses, “Speech on Freedom Summer at Stanford University” (1964) DOCUMENT 6.4. Freedom School Lecture (1964) DOCUMENT 6.5. “Challenge of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party” (1964) DOCUMENT 6.6. Fannie Lou Hamer Testimony before DNC Credentials Committee (1964) DOCUMENT 6.7. “Mississippi Freedom Labor Union Pledge” (1965) DOCUMENT 6.8. James Forman on SNCC, SCLC, and Selma (1985) Further Reading 145 Chapter 7: Economic Dimensions of the Civil Rights Movement 129 133 134 137 138 140 142 143 147 DOCUMENT 7.1. March on Washington Program (1963) DOCUMENT 7.2. John Lewis, Speech at the March on Washington (1963) DOCUMENT 7.3. Lyndon B. Johnson, “War on Poverty Speech” (1964) DOCUMENT 7.4. Demands of the Chicago Freedom Movement (1966), Taped to the Door of City Hall by Martin Luther King Jr. DOCUMENT 7.5. Operation Breadbasket Flyer (ca. late 1960s) 149 150 152 153 155
DOCUMENT 7.6. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., “Statement Announcing the Poor People’s Campaign” (1967) DOCUMENT7.7. Memphis Sanitation Workers’ Demonstrations (1968) DOCUMENT 7.8. William “Bill” Lucy on the Memphis Sanitation Workers’ Strike and the Assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. (2013) DOCUMENT 7.9. Resurrection City, Washington, D.C. (1968) DOCUMENT 7.10. Gautreaux Decision on Public Housing Desegregation (1969) Further Reading 172 176 180 184 188 190 194 198 200 201 204 207 Chapter 9: Gender and Sexuality 210 DOCUMENT 9.1. Lorraine Hansberry, Selections of Anonymous Letters to the Ladder (1957) DOCUMENT 9.2. Dorothy Height, “We Wanted the Voice of a Woman to Be Heard” (2001) DOCUMENT 9.3. SNCC Position on Women in the Movement (1964) DOCUMENT 9.4. Interview with Elaine Brown on Women in the Black Panther Party (1988) DOCUMENT 9.5. Pauli Murray, “The Negro Woman in the Quest for Equality” (1964) DOCUMENT 9.6. Loving v. Virginia Decision (1967) DOCUMENT 9.7. Frances Beal, “Double Jeopardy: To Be Black and Female” (1970) DOCUMENT 9.8. Johnnie Tillmon, “Welfare Is a Women’s Issue” (1972) DOCUMENT 9.9. The Combahee River Collective, a Black Feminist Statement (1977) DOCUMENT 9.10. Huey P. Newton, Speech on Women’s and Gay Liberation Movement (1970) DOCUMENT 9.11. James Baldwin Discusses Homosexuality, Homophobia, and Racism (1984) DOCUMENT 9.12. Bayard Rustin, “From Montgomery to Stonewall” (1986) 212 216 220 222 224 227 231 234 237 242 245 248 249 Chapter 10: Culture and the Movement 251 DOCUMENT 10.1. Lena Horne on the Cover of Ebony Magazine (1956) DOCUMENT 10.2.
Cover of Ebony Magazine Featuring the March on Montgomery (1965) DOCUMENT 10.3. The Freedom Singers (1963) DOCUMENT 10.4. Flyer for the “Pre-march Freedom Rally” for the Meredith Marchers (1966) DOCUMENT 10.5. The Supremes with Television Host Ed Sullivan (1969) DOCUMENT 10.6. Denise Nicholas, “A Grand Romantic Notion” (2010) DOCUMENT 10.7. Free Southern Theater Program Cover (ca. late 1960s) DOCUMENT 1Ö.8. NBC Crew Televises the March on Washington (1963) DOCUMENT 10.9. Clifford Mason, “Why Does White America Love Sidney Poitier So?” (1967) DOCUMENT 10.10. Julia Publicity Photo (ca. 1968) DOCUMENT 10.11. Harriet Glickman Writes Charles Schulz (1968) Further Reading 167 169 DOCUMENT 8.1. Malcolm X, “The Ballot or the Bullet” (1964) DOCUMENT 8.2. National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders Report Summary (1968) DOCUMENT 8.3. Stokely Carmichael, “What We Want” (1966) DOCUMENT 8.4. Bobby Seale on the Formation of the Black Panther Party (1988) DOCUMENT 8.5. Black Panther Party Ten-Point Program (1966) DOCUMENT 8.6. Roy Wilkins and Ramsey Clark, “Search and Destroy: A Report by the Commission of Inquiry into the Black Panthers and the Police” (1973) DOCUMENT 8.7. “Northwestern University Student Demands” (1968) DOCUMENT 8.8. Margaret Burroughs, “What Shall I Tell My Children Who Are Black (Reflections of an African-American Mother)” (1963) DOCUMENT 8.9. Amiri Baraka, “Black People: This Is Our Destiny” (1967) DOCUMENT 8.10. Attica Prisoners’ Demands (1971) DOCUMENT 8.11. Angela Davis, “Political Prisoners, Prisons, and Black Liberation” (1971) Further Reading 161 166 168
Chapter 8: Black Power Further Reading 156 160 269 254 255 256 257 258 259 262 263 264 267 268
Chapter n: Black Power Politics and Reform in the 1970s and 1980s 270 DOCUMENT 11.1 The Gary Declaration (1972) DOCUMENT 11.2. Shirley Chisholm, “Equal Rights for Women” (1969) DOCUMENT 11.3. Harold Washington, Inaugural Address (1983) DOCUMENT 11.4. Jesse Jackson, Speech on the Presidential Campaign Trail (1988) DOCUMENT 11.5. Ocean Hill-Brownsville Flyer on School Control (1968) DOCUMENT 11.6. Tallulah Morgan et al. v. fames W Hennigan et al. Decision (1974) DOCUMENT 11.7. Antibusing Rally in Thomas Park, Boston (1975) DOCUMENT 11.8. Regents of the University of California v. Allan Bakke Decision (1978) DOCUMENT 11.9. United Steelworkers ofAmerica, AFL-CIO-CLC v. Brian Weber Decision (1979) DOCUMENT 11.10. Maynard Jackson Discusses Affirmative Action Policies in Atlanta (1988) Further Reading 299 Chapter 12: The Reach of the Civil Rights Movement 301 DOCUMENT 12.1. “Memorandum on Racial Discrimination in the U.S. and in Support of the Negro Struggle Presented by the African Nationalist Offices” (1963) DOCUMENT 12.2. Malcolm X, Speech at the Organization of African Unity (1964) DOCUMENT 12.3. John Lewis, “SNCC Africa Trip Report” (1964) DOCUMENT 12.4. Coretta Scott King, “to Commandments on Vietnam” (1968) DOCUMENT 12.5. Cesar Chavez on Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. (1978) DOCUMENT 12.6. National Council of Students for a Democratic Society, “Resolution on SNCC” (1966) DOCUMENT 12.7. National Organization for Women Statement of Purpose (1966) DOCUMENT 12.8. Stonewall Activists Marsha P. Johnson and Sylvia Rivera (1973) DOCUMENT 12.9. “The Process of Coming Back into the
World”: An American Indian Movement (A.I.M.) Activist Advocates Cultural and Political Unification (1974) DOCUMENT 12.10. Amy Uyematsu, “The Emergence of Yellow Power” (1969) DOCUMENT 12.11. Protest ofPolice Brutality in Chinatown, New York (1975) Further Reading 304 306 309 312 314 317 319 323 324 329 333 334 Chapter 13: The Black Freedom Movement in the Twenty-First Century DOCUMENT 13.1. Statement of Anita Hill to Senate Judiciary Committee (1991) DOCUMENT 13.2. Statement of Clarence Thomas to Senate Judiciary Committee (1991) DOCUMENT 13.3. LA Police Chiefs and Civil Rights Attorney on LA Riots (200։) DOCUMENT 13.4. Charisse Jones, “Crack and Punishment: Is Race the Issue?” (1995) DOCUMENT 13.5. Louis Farrakhan, Address at the Million Man March (1995) DOCUMENT 13.6. ACT UP New York HIV/AIDS Awareness Poster (1989) DOCUMENT 13.7. Malik Rahim, ‘“This Is Criminal’: Report from New Orleans” (2005) DOCUMENT 13.8. Report on the Flint Water Crisis (2017) DOCUMENT 13.9. National Coalition of Blacks for Reparations in America Outlines the Reparations Campaign (2000) DOCUMENT 13.10. U.S. Senate Resolution against Lynching (2005) DOCUMENT 13.11. Barack Obama, “A More Perfect Union” (2008) DOCUMENT 13.12. Trayvon Martin Photograph (ca. 20J0) DOCUMENT 13.13. Alicia Garza, “A Herstory of the Black Lives Matter Movement” (2014) DOCUMENT 13.14. Bree Newsome Removes Confederate Flag from South Carolina Legislature (2015) DOCUMENT 13.15. Interview with Tarana Burke on the MeToo Movement (2018) DOCUMENT 13.16. ibram X. Kendi, “The American Nightmare” (2020) Further Reading 272 275 277 281
285 286 289 290 294 298 386 336 339 343 344 349 352 356 357 359 362 365 367 374 375 379 380 381
UST OF FIGURES DOCUMENT 1.2. “Don’t Buy Where You Can’t Work” Demonstration (1941) DOCUMENT 1.3. Attorney Samuel Leibowitz with the Scottsboro Boys (ca. 1933) DOCUMENT 1.6. Southern Tenant Farmers Union (1937) DOCUMENT 2.4. Double V Campaign Emblem (ca. 1942) DOCUMENT 2.6. Billboard Protesting Black Occupancy of the Sojourner Truth Homes (1942) DOCUMENT 2.7. Ruth Miller, El Segundo Plant of the Douglas Aircraft Company (ca. 1939-1944) DOCUMENT 2.8. Brigadier General Benjamin O. Davis Watches a Signal Corps Crew Erecting Poles 10 11 17 32 37 38 (1944) DOCUMENT 3.4. Jackie Robinson Breaks the Color Barrier (1947) DOCUMENT 3.8. The Chicago Defender on the Emmett Till Murder (1955) DOCUMENT 3.9. Emmett Till with His Mother, Mamie Till-Mobley (ca. 1950) DOCUM ENT 3.12. The Little Rock Nine and Daisy Bates (1957) DOCUMENT 4.1. David Richmond, Franklin McCain, Ezell Blair, and Joseph McNeil Are Seen Leaving the Woolworth Store (i960) 82 DOCUMENT 4.3. Anne Moody, Joan Trumpauer, and John Salter Sit in at a Jackson Restaurant (1963) DOCUMENT 4.7. Mug Shots of Freedom Riders C. T. Vivian, Mary Hamilton, and Jean Thompson (1961) DOCUMENT 5.8. Police in Birmingham, Ala., Take a Group ofBlack Schoolchildren to Jail (1963) DOCUMENT 62. Missing Poster of Andrew Goodman, James Chaney, and Michael Schwerner (1964) DOCUMENT 6.4. Freedom School Lecture (1964) DOCUMENT 7.1. March on Washington Program (1963) DOCUMENT 7.5. Operation Breadbasket Flyer (ca. late 1960s) DOCUMENT 7.7. Memphis Sanitation Workers’ Demonstrations (1968) DOCUMENT 7.9. Resurrection City, Washington, D.C. (1968) DOCUMENT
10.1. Lena Horne on the Cover of Ebony Magazine (1956) DOCUMENT 10.2. Cover of Ebony Magazine Featuring the March on Montgomery (1965) DOCUMENT 10.3. The Freedom Singers (1963) DOCUMENT 10.4. Flyer for the “Pre-march Freedom Rally” for the Meredith Marchers (1966) DOCUMENT 10.5. The Supremes with Television Host Ed Sullivan (1969) DOCUMENT 10.7. Free Southern Theater Program Cover (ca. late 1960s) DOCUMENT 10.8. NBC Crew Televises the March on Washington (1963) DOCUMENT 10.10. Julia Publicity Photo (ca. 1968) DOCUMENT 10.11. Harriet Glickman Writes Charles Schulz (1968) DOCUMENT11.5. Ocean Hill-Brownsville Flyer on School Control (1968) DOCUMENT 11.7. Antibusing Rally in Thomas Park, Boston (1975) Յ9 255 256 257 258 262 263 267 268 285 289 DOCUMENT 12.8. Stonewall Activists Marsha P. Johnson and Sylvia Rivera (1973) DOCUMENT 12.11. Protest ofPolice Brutality in Chinatown, New York (1975) DOCUMENT 13.6. ACT UP New York HIV/AIDS Awareness Poster (1989) DOCUMENT 13.12. Trayvon Martin Photograph (ca. 2010) 323 333 356 374 DOCUMENT 13.14. Bree Newsome Removes Confederate Flag from South Carolina Legislature (2015) 379 59 68 69 75 86 94 122 133 137 149 155 160 166 254
In the United States, the fight to secure full civil rights for African American people has endured for Centuries. The movement has included many voices, among them, working peo ple, charismatic activists, musicians and artists, the LGBTQIA community, veterans, suburbanites, and elected officials. Moving from the labor struggles of the 1930s to the sit-ins and boycotts of mid-century, and the Black Lives Matter protests of today, this expansive volume brings together first-person accounts, political documents and speeches, and historical photographs from each region of the country. Designed for use in courses and engaging for general readers, this new compilation is the most diverse, most inclusive, and most comprehensive resource available for teaching and learning about the civil rights movement. With chronological and geographical depth, The New Civil Rights Movement Reader addresses a range of key topics, including youth activism, regional and local freedom struggles, voting rights, economic inequality, gender, sexuality, and culture, and the move ment s global reach.
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CONTENTS List of Figures ix Preface xi Preface for Students Introduction xiii i Chapter 1: Labor and Civil Rights in the 1930s 7 DOCUMENT 1.1. “Race Loses Jobs to Whites” (1931) DOCUMENT 1.2. “Don’t Buy Where You Can’t Work” Demonstration (1941) DOCUMENT 1.3. Attorney Samuel Leibowitz with the Scottsboro Boys (ca. 1933) DOCUMENT 1.4. Angelo Herndon, The Scottsboro Boys (1937) DOCUMENT 1.5. Nate Shaw Discusses Sharecropping (1974) DOCUMENT 1.6. Southern Tenant Farmers Union (1937) DOCUMENT 1.7. A. Philip Randolph, “The Pullman Company and the Pullman Porter” (1925) DOCUMENT 1.8. Mary McLeod Bethune, “What Does Democracy Mean to Me?” (1939) Further Reading 8 10 11 12 15 17 18 21 22 Chapter 2: World War II 24 DOCUMENT 2.1. A. Philip Randolph, “The Call to Negro America to March on Washington” (1941) DOCUMENT 2.2. “Executive Order 8802: Prohibition of Discrimination in the Defense Industry” 25 (1941) DOCUMENT 2.3. James G. Thompson, “Should I Sacrifice to Live ‘Half-American?’ Suggest Double VV for Double Victory against Axis Forces and Ugly Prejudices on the Home Front” (1942) DOCUMENT 2.4. Double V Campaign Emblem (ca. 1942) DOCUMENT 2.5. Pauli Murray, “Jim Crow in the Nation’s Capital” (1987) DOCUMENT 2.6. Billboard Protesting Black Occupancy of the Sojourner Truth Homes (1942) DOCUMENT 2.7. Ruth Miller, El Segundo Plant of the Douglas Aircraft Company (ca. 1939--1944) DOCUMENT 2.8. Brigadier General Benjamin O. Davis Watches a Signal Corps Crew Erecting Poles (1944) DOCUMENT 2.9. Lieutenant Colonel Harold Brown on Being a Tuskegee Airman (2010) DOCUMENT 2.10. Executive
Order 9981 Desegregates Armed Forces (1948) 28 Further Reading 30 32 33 37 38 39 40 45 46 Chapter 3: Galvanizing the Movement in the 1950s 48 DOCUMENT3.1. Smith v. Allwright Decision. (1944) DOCUMENT 3.2. Shelley v. Kraemer Decision (1948) DOCUMENT 3.3. George Houser and Bayard Rustin, CORE, “We Challenged Jim Crow!” (1947) DOCUMENT 3.4. Jackie Robinson Breaks the Color Barrier (1947) DOCUMENT 3.5. Thurgood Marshall’s Argument before the Supreme Court in Brown v. Board ofEducation (1954) DOCUMENT 3.6. Brown v. Board of Education Decision (1954) DOCUMENT 3.7. Southern Manifesto (1956) DOCUMENT 3.8. The Chicago Defender on the Emmett Till Murder (1955) DOCUMENT 3.9. Emmett Till with His Mother, Mamie Till-Mobley (ca. 1950) 51 53 56 59 60 62 65 68 69
DOCUMENT 3.10. Rosa Parks Recalls the Montgomery Bus Boycott (1977) DOCUMENT 3.11. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s Speech at Holt Street Baptist Church (1955) DOCUMENT 3.12. The Little Rock Nine and Daisy Bates (1957) DOCUMENT 3.13. Melba Pattillo Beals on Integrating Central High School (1994) Further Reading 70 72 75 76 79 Chapter 4: Youth Activism in the Early 1960s 80 DOCUMENT 4.1. David Richmond, Franklin McCain, Ezell Blair, and Joseph McNeil Are Seen Leaving the Woolworth Store (i960) 82 DOCUMENT 4.2. Anne Moody’s Involvement in Student Demonstrations in Jackson, Mississippi (1963) 83 DOCUMENT 4.3. Anne Moody, Joan Trumpauer, and John Salter Sit in at a Jackson Restaurant (1963) 86 DOCUMENT 4.4. Diane Nash, “Speech at National Catholic Conference for Interracial Justice” (1961) 87 DOCUMENT 4.5. Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, “Statement of Purpose” (i960) 91 DOCUMENT 4.6. Ella Baker,“Bigger than a Hamburger” (i960) 92 DOCUMENT 4.7. Mug Shots of Freedom Riders C. T. Vivian, Mary Hamilton, and Jean Thompson (1961) 94 DOCUMENT 4.8. James Meredith, “I Can’t Fight Alone” (1963) 95 Further Reading 97 Chapter 5: Local Struggles 99 DOCUMENT 5.1. Robert F. Williams, “Can Negroes Afford to Be Pacifists?” (1959) DOCUMENT 5.2. Septima Poinsette Clark on Organizing Citizenship Schools (1976) DOCUMENT 5.3. Charles Sherrod on the Albany Movement (2011) DOCUMENT 5.4. “Letter from the Albany Movement to the Albany City Commission” (1962) DOCUMENT 5.5. Gloria Richardson, “Focus on Cambridge” (1964) DOCUMENT 5.6. “Birmingham Manifesto” (1963) DOCUMENT 5.7. Martin Luther King
Jr., “Letter from Birmingham Jail” (1963) DOCUMENT 5.8. Police in Birmingham, Ala., Take a Group ofBlack Schoolchildren to Jail (1963) DOCUMENT 5.9. Charles Sims on the Deacons for Defense (1965) Further Reading 100 104 107 109 111 115 116 122 123 126 Chapter 6: The Struggles for Voting and Political Power in Mississippi and Alabama 127 DOCUMENT 6.1. Medgår Evers, Address at Mount Heron Baptist Church (1957) DOCUMENT 6.2. Missing Poster of Andrew Goodman, James Chaney, and Michael Schwerner (1964) DOCUMENT 6.3. Bob Moses, “Speech on Freedom Summer at Stanford University” (1964) DOCUMENT 6.4. Freedom School Lecture (1964) DOCUMENT 6.5. “Challenge of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party” (1964) DOCUMENT 6.6. Fannie Lou Hamer Testimony before DNC Credentials Committee (1964) DOCUMENT 6.7. “Mississippi Freedom Labor Union Pledge” (1965) DOCUMENT 6.8. James Forman on SNCC, SCLC, and Selma (1985) Further Reading 145 Chapter 7: Economic Dimensions of the Civil Rights Movement 129 133 134 137 138 140 142 143 147 DOCUMENT 7.1. March on Washington Program (1963) DOCUMENT 7.2. John Lewis, Speech at the March on Washington (1963) DOCUMENT 7.3. Lyndon B. Johnson, “War on Poverty Speech” (1964) DOCUMENT 7.4. Demands of the Chicago Freedom Movement (1966), Taped to the Door of City Hall by Martin Luther King Jr. DOCUMENT 7.5. Operation Breadbasket Flyer (ca. late 1960s) 149 150 152 153 155
DOCUMENT 7.6. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., “Statement Announcing the Poor People’s Campaign” (1967) DOCUMENT7.7. Memphis Sanitation Workers’ Demonstrations (1968) DOCUMENT 7.8. William “Bill” Lucy on the Memphis Sanitation Workers’ Strike and the Assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. (2013) DOCUMENT 7.9. Resurrection City, Washington, D.C. (1968) DOCUMENT 7.10. Gautreaux Decision on Public Housing Desegregation (1969) Further Reading 172 176 180 184 188 190 194 198 200 201 204 207 Chapter 9: Gender and Sexuality 210 DOCUMENT 9.1. Lorraine Hansberry, Selections of Anonymous Letters to the Ladder (1957) DOCUMENT 9.2. Dorothy Height, “We Wanted the Voice of a Woman to Be Heard” (2001) DOCUMENT 9.3. SNCC Position on Women in the Movement (1964) DOCUMENT 9.4. Interview with Elaine Brown on Women in the Black Panther Party (1988) DOCUMENT 9.5. Pauli Murray, “The Negro Woman in the Quest for Equality” (1964) DOCUMENT 9.6. Loving v. Virginia Decision (1967) DOCUMENT 9.7. Frances Beal, “Double Jeopardy: To Be Black and Female” (1970) DOCUMENT 9.8. Johnnie Tillmon, “Welfare Is a Women’s Issue” (1972) DOCUMENT 9.9. The Combahee River Collective, a Black Feminist Statement (1977) DOCUMENT 9.10. Huey P. Newton, Speech on Women’s and Gay Liberation Movement (1970) DOCUMENT 9.11. James Baldwin Discusses Homosexuality, Homophobia, and Racism (1984) DOCUMENT 9.12. Bayard Rustin, “From Montgomery to Stonewall” (1986) 212 216 220 222 224 227 231 234 237 242 245 248 249 Chapter 10: Culture and the Movement 251 DOCUMENT 10.1. Lena Horne on the Cover of Ebony Magazine (1956) DOCUMENT 10.2.
Cover of Ebony Magazine Featuring the March on Montgomery (1965) DOCUMENT 10.3. The Freedom Singers (1963) DOCUMENT 10.4. Flyer for the “Pre-march Freedom Rally” for the Meredith Marchers (1966) DOCUMENT 10.5. The Supremes with Television Host Ed Sullivan (1969) DOCUMENT 10.6. Denise Nicholas, “A Grand Romantic Notion” (2010) DOCUMENT 10.7. Free Southern Theater Program Cover (ca. late 1960s) DOCUMENT 1Ö.8. NBC Crew Televises the March on Washington (1963) DOCUMENT 10.9. Clifford Mason, “Why Does White America Love Sidney Poitier So?” (1967) DOCUMENT 10.10. Julia Publicity Photo (ca. 1968) DOCUMENT 10.11. Harriet Glickman Writes Charles Schulz (1968) Further Reading 167 169 DOCUMENT 8.1. Malcolm X, “The Ballot or the Bullet” (1964) DOCUMENT 8.2. National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders Report Summary (1968) DOCUMENT 8.3. Stokely Carmichael, “What We Want” (1966) DOCUMENT 8.4. Bobby Seale on the Formation of the Black Panther Party (1988) DOCUMENT 8.5. Black Panther Party Ten-Point Program (1966) DOCUMENT 8.6. Roy Wilkins and Ramsey Clark, “Search and Destroy: A Report by the Commission of Inquiry into the Black Panthers and the Police” (1973) DOCUMENT 8.7. “Northwestern University Student Demands” (1968) DOCUMENT 8.8. Margaret Burroughs, “What Shall I Tell My Children Who Are Black (Reflections of an African-American Mother)” (1963) DOCUMENT 8.9. Amiri Baraka, “Black People: This Is Our Destiny” (1967) DOCUMENT 8.10. Attica Prisoners’ Demands (1971) DOCUMENT 8.11. Angela Davis, “Political Prisoners, Prisons, and Black Liberation” (1971) Further Reading 161 166 168
Chapter 8: Black Power Further Reading 156 160 269 254 255 256 257 258 259 262 263 264 267 268
Chapter n: Black Power Politics and Reform in the 1970s and 1980s 270 DOCUMENT 11.1 The Gary Declaration (1972) DOCUMENT 11.2. Shirley Chisholm, “Equal Rights for Women” (1969) DOCUMENT 11.3. Harold Washington, Inaugural Address (1983) DOCUMENT 11.4. Jesse Jackson, Speech on the Presidential Campaign Trail (1988) DOCUMENT 11.5. Ocean Hill-Brownsville Flyer on School Control (1968) DOCUMENT 11.6. Tallulah Morgan et al. v. fames W Hennigan et al. Decision (1974) DOCUMENT 11.7. Antibusing Rally in Thomas Park, Boston (1975) DOCUMENT 11.8. Regents of the University of California v. Allan Bakke Decision (1978) DOCUMENT 11.9. United Steelworkers ofAmerica, AFL-CIO-CLC v. Brian Weber Decision (1979) DOCUMENT 11.10. Maynard Jackson Discusses Affirmative Action Policies in Atlanta (1988) Further Reading 299 Chapter 12: The Reach of the Civil Rights Movement 301 DOCUMENT 12.1. “Memorandum on Racial Discrimination in the U.S. and in Support of the Negro Struggle Presented by the African Nationalist Offices” (1963) DOCUMENT 12.2. Malcolm X, Speech at the Organization of African Unity (1964) DOCUMENT 12.3. John Lewis, “SNCC Africa Trip Report” (1964) DOCUMENT 12.4. Coretta Scott King, “to Commandments on Vietnam” (1968) DOCUMENT 12.5. Cesar Chavez on Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. (1978) DOCUMENT 12.6. National Council of Students for a Democratic Society, “Resolution on SNCC” (1966) DOCUMENT 12.7. National Organization for Women Statement of Purpose (1966) DOCUMENT 12.8. Stonewall Activists Marsha P. Johnson and Sylvia Rivera (1973) DOCUMENT 12.9. “The Process of Coming Back into the
World”: An American Indian Movement (A.I.M.) Activist Advocates Cultural and Political Unification (1974) DOCUMENT 12.10. Amy Uyematsu, “The Emergence of Yellow Power” (1969) DOCUMENT 12.11. Protest ofPolice Brutality in Chinatown, New York (1975) Further Reading 304 306 309 312 314 317 319 323 324 329 333 334 Chapter 13: The Black Freedom Movement in the Twenty-First Century DOCUMENT 13.1. Statement of Anita Hill to Senate Judiciary Committee (1991) DOCUMENT 13.2. Statement of Clarence Thomas to Senate Judiciary Committee (1991) DOCUMENT 13.3. LA Police Chiefs and Civil Rights Attorney on LA Riots (200։) DOCUMENT 13.4. Charisse Jones, “Crack and Punishment: Is Race the Issue?” (1995) DOCUMENT 13.5. Louis Farrakhan, Address at the Million Man March (1995) DOCUMENT 13.6. ACT UP New York HIV/AIDS Awareness Poster (1989) DOCUMENT 13.7. Malik Rahim, ‘“This Is Criminal’: Report from New Orleans” (2005) DOCUMENT 13.8. Report on the Flint Water Crisis (2017) DOCUMENT 13.9. National Coalition of Blacks for Reparations in America Outlines the Reparations Campaign (2000) DOCUMENT 13.10. U.S. Senate Resolution against Lynching (2005) DOCUMENT 13.11. Barack Obama, “A More Perfect Union” (2008) DOCUMENT 13.12. Trayvon Martin Photograph (ca. 20J0) DOCUMENT 13.13. Alicia Garza, “A Herstory of the Black Lives Matter Movement” (2014) DOCUMENT 13.14. Bree Newsome Removes Confederate Flag from South Carolina Legislature (2015) DOCUMENT 13.15. Interview with Tarana Burke on the MeToo Movement (2018) DOCUMENT 13.16. ibram X. Kendi, “The American Nightmare” (2020) Further Reading 272 275 277 281
285 286 289 290 294 298 ' 386 336 339 343 344 349 352 356 357 359 362 365 367 374 375 379 380 381
UST OF FIGURES DOCUMENT 1.2. “Don’t Buy Where You Can’t Work” Demonstration (1941) DOCUMENT 1.3. Attorney Samuel Leibowitz with the Scottsboro Boys (ca. 1933) DOCUMENT 1.6. Southern Tenant Farmers Union (1937) DOCUMENT 2.4. Double V Campaign Emblem (ca. 1942) DOCUMENT 2.6. Billboard Protesting Black Occupancy of the Sojourner Truth Homes (1942) DOCUMENT 2.7. Ruth Miller, El Segundo Plant of the Douglas Aircraft Company (ca. 1939-1944) DOCUMENT 2.8. Brigadier General Benjamin O. Davis Watches a Signal Corps Crew Erecting Poles 10 11 17 32 37 38 (1944) DOCUMENT 3.4. Jackie Robinson Breaks the Color Barrier (1947) DOCUMENT 3.8. The Chicago Defender on the Emmett Till Murder (1955) DOCUMENT 3.9. Emmett Till with His Mother, Mamie Till-Mobley (ca. 1950) DOCUM ENT 3.12. The Little Rock Nine and Daisy Bates (1957) DOCUMENT 4.1. David Richmond, Franklin McCain, Ezell Blair, and Joseph McNeil Are Seen Leaving the Woolworth Store (i960) 82 DOCUMENT 4.3. Anne Moody, Joan Trumpauer, and John Salter Sit in at a Jackson Restaurant (1963) DOCUMENT 4.7. Mug Shots of Freedom Riders C. T. Vivian, Mary Hamilton, and Jean Thompson (1961) DOCUMENT 5.8. Police in Birmingham, Ala., Take a Group ofBlack Schoolchildren to Jail (1963) DOCUMENT 62. Missing Poster of Andrew Goodman, James Chaney, and Michael Schwerner (1964) DOCUMENT 6.4. Freedom School Lecture (1964) DOCUMENT 7.1. March on Washington Program (1963) DOCUMENT 7.5. Operation Breadbasket Flyer (ca. late 1960s) DOCUMENT 7.7. Memphis Sanitation Workers’ Demonstrations (1968) DOCUMENT 7.9. Resurrection City, Washington, D.C. (1968) DOCUMENT
10.1. Lena Horne on the Cover of Ebony Magazine (1956) DOCUMENT 10.2. Cover of Ebony Magazine Featuring the March on Montgomery (1965) DOCUMENT 10.3. The Freedom Singers (1963) DOCUMENT 10.4. Flyer for the “Pre-march Freedom Rally” for the Meredith Marchers (1966) DOCUMENT 10.5. The Supremes with Television Host Ed Sullivan (1969) DOCUMENT 10.7. Free Southern Theater Program Cover (ca. late 1960s) DOCUMENT 10.8. NBC Crew Televises the March on Washington (1963) DOCUMENT 10.10. Julia Publicity Photo (ca. 1968) DOCUMENT 10.11. Harriet Glickman Writes Charles Schulz (1968) DOCUMENT11.5. Ocean Hill-Brownsville Flyer on School Control (1968) DOCUMENT 11.7. Antibusing Rally in Thomas Park, Boston (1975) Յ9 255 256 257 258 262 263 267 268 285 289 DOCUMENT 12.8. Stonewall Activists Marsha P. Johnson and Sylvia Rivera (1973) DOCUMENT 12.11. Protest ofPolice Brutality in Chinatown, New York (1975) DOCUMENT 13.6. ACT UP New York HIV/AIDS Awareness Poster (1989) DOCUMENT 13.12. Trayvon Martin Photograph (ca. 2010) 323 333 356 374 DOCUMENT 13.14. Bree Newsome Removes Confederate Flag from South Carolina Legislature (2015) 379 59 68 69 75 86 94 122 133 137 149 155 160 166 254
In the United States, the fight to secure full civil rights for African American people has endured for Centuries. The movement has included many voices, among them, working peo ple, charismatic activists, musicians and artists, the LGBTQIA community, veterans, suburbanites, and elected officials. Moving from the labor struggles of the 1930s to the sit-ins and boycotts of mid-century, and the Black Lives Matter protests of today, this expansive volume brings together first-person accounts, political documents and speeches, and historical photographs from each region of the country. Designed for use in courses and engaging for general readers, this new compilation is the most diverse, most inclusive, and most comprehensive resource available for teaching and learning about the civil rights movement. With chronological and geographical depth, The New Civil Rights Movement Reader addresses a range of key topics, including youth activism, regional and local freedom struggles, voting rights, economic inequality, gender, sexuality, and culture, and the move ment's global reach. |
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title | The new civil rights movement reader resistance, resilience, and justice |
title_auth | The new civil rights movement reader resistance, resilience, and justice |
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title_exact_search_txtP | The new civil rights movement reader resistance, resilience, and justice |
title_full | The new civil rights movement reader resistance, resilience, and justice edited by Traci Parker and Marcia Walker-McWilliams |
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