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Montgomery Bus Boycott and the Women Who Started It
Montgomery Bus Boycott and the Women Who Started It
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Montgomery Bus Boycott and the Women Who Started It

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Histories of the Montgomery Bus Boycott of 19551956 typically focus on Rose Parks, who refused to yield her bus seat to a White man, and on a young Martin Luther King Jr., who became the spokesman for the Black community organization set up to pursue a boycott of Montgomerys segregated city buses. In an important revision of the traditional account, this extraordinary personal memoir reveals an earlier and more important role played by a group of middle-class Black Montgomery women in creating the boycott. As head of the Womens Political Council, the most active and assertive black civic organization in the City, Jo Ann Robinson was centrally involved in planning for a boycott far in advance and was able to immediately initiate it the evening Rosa Parks was arrested. Robinson also took part in crucial but ultimately unsuccessful negotiations with White officials both before and during the protest. Her proud, moving narrative vividly portrays her colleagues in the struggle, their strategies and decisions, and evokes the complex emotional currents in Montgomery during the boycott. The Montgomery Bus Boycott ignited the civil rights movement and has always been vitally important in southern history and African American history. This seminal publication, named to Wall Street Journals top ten list of books on the civil rights movement, has long been a milestone publication in understanding Americas complicated racial history.
Undertittel
The Memoir of Jo Ann Gibson Robinson
ISBN
9781572337657
Språk
Engelsk
Utgivelsesdato
16.5.2011
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