Research Catalog
The making of Martin Luther King and the civil rights movement / edited by Brian Ward and Tony Badger.
- Title
- The making of Martin Luther King and the civil rights movement / edited by Brian Ward and Tony Badger.
- Publication
- Washington Square, New York : New York University Press, 1996.
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Status | Format | Access | Call Number | Item Location |
---|---|---|---|---|
Text | Request in advance | E185.97.K5 M255 1996x | Off-site |
Details
- Additional Authors
- Description
- xiii, 241 p.; 23 cm.
- Summary
- Traditional civil rights movement history, focusing on well-known leaders such as Martin Luther King and Malcolm X, notable movements such as the NAACP, CORE, SCLC, and SNCC, and on communities located primarily in the deep south, has been only partially successful in identifying the origins of the civil rights movement. The Making of Martin Luther King and the Civil Rights Movement constitutes a challenge to many of the agendas established by civil rights scholarship of the past twenty-five years and offers new insights into the origins, development, representations, and international ramifications of the movement. Collectively, the essays in this volume suggest new ways of thinking about the civil rights movement and its repercussions. The core essays of the volume, written by distinguished scholars such as Clayborne Carson, highlight the importance of black activism in the 1930s and 1940s, not only as practiced by ministers, but also by the NAACP, black professionals, and labor organizers. Innovative chapters comparing experiences in Britain and South Africa reveal the ways in which movement leaders exploited national ideals and familiar language to secure sympathetic responses both at home and abroad, and show how a commitment to nonviolence gave the movement its distinctive cast. The volume effectively challenges accepted notions of "race" and "racial equality" and considers the long-term effects of the struggle on its participants. Tracing the development of African American political though since the 1960s, The Making of Martin Luther King and the Civil Rights Movement offers a new look at the contemporary legacy of the civil rights movement.
- Subject
- Genre/Form
- Conference papers and proceedings
- History
- Note
- Papers selected from the Martin Luther King, Jr., Memorial Conference on Civil Rights and Race Relations held between 21 and 24 October, 1993 at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne.
- Includes index.
- Bibliography (note)
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- Processing Action (note)
- committed to retain
- Contents
- The civil rights movement in Louisiana, 1934-54 / Adam Fairclough -- 'He founded a movement': W.H. Flowers, the committee on negro organizations and the origins of black activism in Arkansas, 1940-57 / John Kirk -- 'Nixon was the one': Edgar Daniel Nixon, the MIA and the Montgomery bus boycott / John White -- Fatalism, not gradualism: race and the crisis of southern liberalism, 1945-65 / Tony Badger -- White liberal intellectuals, civil rights and gradualism, 1954-60 / Walter A. Jackson -- Rethinking African-American political thought in the post-revolutionary era / Clayborn Carson -- From Shiloh to selma: the impact of the civil War Centennial on the black freedom struggle in the United States, 1961-65 / Robert Cook -- Touchstones, authorities and Marian Anderson: the making of 'I have a dream' / Keith D. Miller and Emily M. Lewis -- Politics and fictional representation: the case of the Civil Rights Movement / Richard H. King -- The limits of America: rethinking equality in the changing context of British race relations /Tarqiq Modood -- British responses to Marin Luthar King jr. and the Civil Rights Movement, 1954-68 / Mike Sewell -- Non-violient resistence to white supremacy: a comparison of the american civil rights movement and the South African defiance campaigns of the 1950s / George M. Fredrickson --
- ISBN
- 0814792960 (pbk.)
- 0814792952
- LCCN
- ^^^95014667^
- OCLC
- 32347073
- SCSB-9890240
- Owning Institutions
- Harvard Library