Undaunted by the Fight: Spelman College and the Civil Rights Movement, 1957/1967

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Mercer University Press, 2005 - 286 páginas
Undaunted by the Fight is a study of small but dedicated, group of Spelman College students and faculty who, between 1957 and 1967 risked their lives, compromised their grades, and jeopardized their careers to make Atlanta and the South a more just and open society. Lefever argues that the participation of Spelman's students and faculty in the Civil Rights Movement represented both a continuity and a break with the institution's earlier history. On the one hand their actions were consistent with Spelman's long history of liberal arts and community service; yet, on the other hand; as his research documents; their actions represented a break with Spelman's traditional non-political stance and challenged the assumption that social changes should occur only gradually and within established legal institutions. For the first time in the eighty-plus years of Spelman's existence, the students and faculty who participated in the Movement took actions that directly challenged the injustices of the social and political status quo. Too often in the past the Movement literature, including the literature on the Atlanta Movement focused disproportionately on the males involved to the exclusion of the women who were equally involved, and; who, in many instances, initiated actions and provided leadership for the Movement. Lefever concludes his study by saying that Spelman's activist students and faculty succeeded to the extent they did because they "kept their eyes on the prize." They endured the struggle; he says; and, in so doing; eventually won many prizes -- some personal, others social. "Undaunted; they liberated themselves, but at the same time they liberated their school, their city and thelarger society."
 

Contenido

Movement Prologue
7
You Can Always Tell a Spelman Girl
15
Breaking Free
23
From Appeal to Action
33
Formalizing the Movement
41
Summer Maneuvers
53
Renewing the Struggle
59
A Struggle Fit for a King
75
Sitins and Protests Continue
171
Expulsion and Reinstatement
183
Mississippi Freedom Summer
193
From Mississippi to Africa
205
Gender Racial and Ideological Clashes
209
Nobel Peace Prize
219
SelmatoMontgomery March
225
Black Power
235

Celebrating an Anniversary
85
Negotiating an Agreement
103
Riding for Freedom
111
Agonizing Choice Study or Action
125
Aint Gonna Let Chief Pritchett Turn Me Round
131
Twin Issues Civil Rights and Peace
147
Dismissal
161
The March on Washington
165
Adieu Ruby Doris
247
Conclusion
253
Epilogue
259
An Appeal for Human Rights
269
Bibliography
271
Index
279
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Página 29 - We must say in all candor that we plan to use every legal and nonviolent means at our disposal to secure full citizenship rights as members of this great democracy of ours.

Acerca del autor (2005)

Harry G. Lefever is Professor Emeritus of Sociology at Spelman College.

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