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THE BRITISH LIBRARY THE AMERICAN CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT A GUIDE TO MATERIALS IN THE BRITISH LIBRARY by Jean Kemble THE ECCLES CENTRE FOR AMERICAN STUDIES ISBN: 0-7123-4417-9

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Page 1: THE BRITISH LIBRARY THE AMERICAN CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT … · Civil Rights and the American Negro: ... Oral History of the Civil Rights Movement from the 1950s through the 1980s

THE BRITISH LIBRARY

THE AMERICAN CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENTA GUIDE TO MATERIALS IN THE BRITISH LIBRARY

by

Jean Kemble

THE ECCLES CENTREFOR AMERICAN STUDIES

ISBN: 0-7123-4417-9

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CONTENTS

Introduction

General Works

Phases of the Movement Origins School Desegregation Bus Boycotts Sit-ins Freedom Rides Voter Registration and the Voting Rights Act of 1965 Black Power

Civil Rights Organisations SNCC SCLC CORE NAACP National Urban League

Participants in the Movement Students/Youths Whites in the Movement Women in the Movement Biographies and Autobiographies

The Federal Government Executive Legislative Legal/Judicial

States Alabama Arkansas Florida Georgia Louisiana Mississippi North Carolina Tennessee Virginia Washington, DC Other States

Other Topics Leadership Martin Luther King, Jr. Malcolm X Public Opinion White Reaction

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Political Consequences Social and Economic Consequences Music of the Movement

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INTRODUCTION

The Eccles Centre for American Studies in the British Library wasestablished in 1991 both to promote the Library’s North Americancollections through bibliographical guides and exhibitions and torespond to enquiries from students, academics and the general publicconcerning all aspects of American history, literature and culture.

During the last six years the civil rights movement of the 1950-60shas proved to be one of the most popular areas of research,particularly among undergraduates and sixth-form students. Theenquiries have covered many different aspects of the movement:school desegregation, bus boycotts, sit-ins, marches, the involvementof white northern college students, the actions of individuals such asRosa Parks and Martin Luther King, Jr., and the reactions of whitesoutherners and the federal government.

This guide will facilitate research on these topics and many others. Itincludes not only books and periodical articles which are housed inthe Library’s humanities collections at St Pancras and the DocumentSupply Centre (DSC) at Boston Spa, but also newspaper and newsmagazine articles which are located at the British Library NewspaperLibrary at Colindale. The shelf-marks for the former appear inparentheses at the end of each entry while the latter may be identifiedby the notation BLNL.

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GENERAL WORKS

ADAMS, A. JOHN and JOAN MARTIN BURKE. Civil Rights: aCurrent Guide to the People, Organizations, and Events. New York:R. R. Bowker, 1970, 194pp. (X.800/6239)

ASANTE, KETE MOLEFI. “Rhetorical Alliances in the Civil RightsEra.” Negro Educational Review 36, no. 1 (1985): 6-12. (DSC:6075.160000)

BARKAN, STEVEN. “Interorganizational Conflict in the SouthernCivil Rights Movement.” Sociological Inquiry 56, no. 2 (1986): 190-209. (DSC: 8319.625000)

BARNES, CATHERINE A. Journey from Jim Crow: theDesegregation of Southern Transit. New York; Guildford: ColumbiaUniversity Press, 1983, 313pp. (X.800/39329)

BATCHELDER, ALAN B. “Economic Forces Serving the Ends ofthe Negro Protest.” Annals of the American Academy of Political andSocial Science 357 (1965): 80-88. (Ac.2383)

BELKNAP, MICHAEL R. Attitudes, Goals and Priorities. NewYork: Garland, 1991. (YC.1992.b.1914)

BENNETT, LERONE, Jr. The Negro Mood and Other Essays.Chicago: Johnson Publishing Co., 1964, 104pp. (X.529/7165)

BLAUSTEIN, ALBERT P. and ROBERT L. ZANGRANDON, eds.Civil Rights and the American Negro: a Documentary History. NewYork: Washington Square Press, 1989, 671pp. (X.700/5419)

BLOOM, JACK M. “The Civil Rights Movement: Upheaval andOrganization.” In Dream and Reality: the Modern Black Struggle forFreedom and Equality, edited by Jeannine Swift, pp.29-41. NewYork; London: Greenwood Press. (YC.1992.b.3356)

------------ Class, Race and the Civil Rights Movement. Bloomington:Indiana University Press, 1987, 267pp. (YH.1988.b.585)

BLUMBERG, RHODA L. Civil Rights: the 1960’s FreedomStruggle. Rev. ed. Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1991, 244pp.(YH.1988.a.506)

BOOKER, SIMEON. Black Man’s America. Englewood Cliffs, NJ:Prentice Hall Press, 1964, 230pp. (X.809/121)

BRANCH, TAYLOR. Parting the Waters: America in the KingYears, 1954-63. London: Papermac. (YC.1991.b.5103)

BREED, WARREN. “Group Structure and Resistance toDesegregation in the South.” Social Problems 10, no. 1 (1962): 84-94. (P.521/945)

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BROOM, LEONARD and NORVAL D. GLENN. Transformation ofthe Negro American. New York: Harper & Row, 1965, 207pp.(X.809/1886)

BULLARD, SARA, ed. Free At Last: a History of the Civil RightsMovement and Those Who Died in the Struggle. Montgomery, AL:Southern Poverty Law Center, 1989, 104pp. (YK.1993.b.13297)

BURNS, W. HEYWOOD. The Voices of Negro Protest in America.New York; London: Oxford University Press, 1963, 88pp. (8183.t.8)

BURSON, GEORGE S., Jr. “The Second Reconstruction: aHistoriographical Essay on Recent Works.” Journal of Negro History59, no. 4 (1974): 322-36. (Ac.8444)

BUTTON, JAMES W. Blacks and Social Change: Impact of the CivilRights Movement in Southern Communities. Princeton: PrincetonUniversity Press, 1989, 326pp. (YH.1990.b.231)

CARSON, CLAYBORNE, ed. The Eyes on the Prize: Civil RightsReader. New York; London: Penguin Books, 1991.(YC.1994.a.1243)

------------, ed. A Guide to Research on Martin Luther King, Jr., andthe Modern Black Freedom Struggle. Stanford, CA: StanfordUniversity Libraries, 1989, 185pp. (DSC: 6227.1308 no. 1)

CASHMAN, SEAN DENNIS. African-Americans and the Quest forCivil Rights, 1900-1990. New York: New York University Press,1991, 321pp. (DSC: 92/02265)

CHAFE, WILLIAM H., ed. “The Civil Rights Movement.” In TheUnfinished Journey: America Since World War II, pp.146-76. NewYork; Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1995. (YC.1995.b.3605)

----------- “The Civil Rights Revolution, 1945-1960: the Gods BringThreads to Webs Begun.” In Robert H. Bremner and Gary W.Reichard, eds. Reshaping America: Society and Institutions, 1945-1960. Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 1982. (DSC: 82/31780)

CHONG, DENNIS. Collective Action and the Civil Rights Movement.Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1991, 261pp.(YC.1992.a.3190)

CLEGHORN, REECE. “The Angels Are White: Who Pays the Billsfor Civil Rights?” New Republic, 17 August 1963, pp.12-14. (BLNL)

COLES, ROBERT. Farewell to the South. Boston: Little, Brown &Co., 1972. (X.708/11025)

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COTHRAN, TILMAN C. “The Negro Protest Against Segregation inthe South.” Annals of the American Academy of Political and SocialScience 357 (1965): 65-72. (Ac.2383)

COUSINS, NORMAN. “Black Wind Rising.” Saturday Review, 30May 1964, p.22. (BLNL)

COUTO, RICHARD A. Ain’t Gonna Let Nobody Turn Me Round:the Pursuit of Racial Justice in the Rural South. Philadelphia:Temple University Press, 1991, 310pp. (YA.1992.b.4794)

DANZIG, DAVID. “The Meaning of Negro Strategy.” Commentary,37, (February 1964): 41-46. (P.P.15.abc)

DITTMER, JOHN, GEORGE C. WRIGHT and W. MARVINDELANEY. Essays on the American Civil Rights Movement. CollegeStation: Texas A & M University Press, 1993. (YA.1995.b.1483)

DORMAN, MICHAEL. We Shall Overcome. New York: DelacortePress, 1964, 340pp. (X.809/3370)

DUNBAR, LESLIE W. “Civil Rights Movement.” In Encyclopediaof Religion in the South, edited by Samuel S. Hill, pp.172-75. Macon,GA: Mercer University Press, 1984. (YA.1989.b.5027)

----------- “The Enduring American Dilemma.” Virginia QuarterlyReview 59, no. 3, (1983): 369-83. (Ac.2691.ta./4)

EISINGER, PETER K. “The Conditions of Protest Behavior inAmerican Cities.” American Political Science Review 67, (March1973): 11-28. (Ac.2380/2)

FONTAINE, THOMAS WILLIAM. Reflections on Segregation,Desegregation, Power and Morals. Springfield, IL: Charles C.Thomas, [1967], 162pp. (X.800/6640)

FRANKLIN, JOHN HOPE and ISIDORE STARR, eds. The Negro inTwentieth Century America: a Reader on the Struggle for CivilRights. New York: Random House, 1967, 542pp. (X.700/9942)

FULLINWIDER, S. P. The Mind and Mood of Black America:Twentieth Century Thought. Homewood, IL: Dorsey Press, 1969,255pp. (X.709/13690)

GAIWAD, DEEPAK S. Civil Rights Movement in America. NewDelhi: Deep & Deep, 1987. (YA.1989.a.12622)

GARROW, DAVID J. “The Age of the Unheralded.” Progressive(April 1990): 38-43. (DSC: 6924.640000)

GESCHWENDER, JAMES A. “The Changing Role of Violence inthe Black Revolt.” Sociological Symposium 9 (1973): 1-5. (DSC:8319.650100)

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GOOD, PAUL. “Beyond the Voting Rights Act.” The Reporter, 7October 1965, pp.25-29. (X.800/26003)

HAINES, HERBERT H. Black Radicals and the Civil RightsMainstream 1954-1970. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press,1988, 231pp. (YA.1989.b.6324)

HAMPTON, HENRY and STEVE FAYER. Voices of Freedom: anOral History of the Civil Rights Movement from the 1950s throughthe 1980s. New York: Bantam Books, 1990, 692pp.(YA.1994.a.11357)

HEACOCK, ROLAND T. Understanding the Negro Protest. NewYork: Pageant Press, 1965, 138pp. (YA.1987.a.8290)

HILL, HERBERT. Citizen’s Guide to Desegregation: a Study of theSocial and Legal Change in American Life. Boston: Beacon Press,1956, 185pp. (8158.de.5)

JACKSON, JAMES E. U.S. Negroes in Battle: from Little Rock toWatts, A Diary of Events, 1957-1965. Moscow: Progress Publishers,1967, 147pp. (X.809/5813)

JACKSON, MAURICE. “The Civil Rights Movement and SocialChange.” In Social Movements and Social Change, edited by R. L.Lauer, pp.174-89. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press,1976. (X.800/26006)

JAMES, HENRY. They Didn’t Put That on the Huntley-Brinkley! AVagabond Journalist Encounters the New South. Athens: Universityof Georgia Press, 1993, 305pp. (YC.1994.b.638)

JENKINS, J. CRAIG and CRAIG M. ECKERT. “Channelling BlackInsurgency: Elite Patronage and Professional Social MovementOrganizations in the Development of the Black Movement.”American Sociological Review 51, (December 1986): 812-29.(Ac.2285/2)

KAHN, TOM. “Problems of the Negro Movement.” Dissent 11, no.1 (1964): 108-38. (P.P.3558.iwa)

------------ and AUGUST MEIER. “Recent Trends in the Civil RightsMovement.” New Politics 3, (Spring 1964): 34-53. (P.P.8001.lm)

KILLIAN, LEWIS M. “Organization, Rationality and Spontaneity inthe Civil Rights Movement.” American Sociological Review 49(December 1984): 770-83. (Ac.2285/2)

KING, RICHARD H. “Citizenship and Self-Respect: the Experienceof Politics in the Civil Rights Movement.” Journal of AmericanStudies 22, no 1 (1988): 7-24. (P.901/236)

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------------- Civil Rights and the Idea of Freedom. New York; Oxford:Oxford University Press, 1992. (YC.1993.a.1101)

LAWSON, STEPHEN F. “Civil Rights.” In Exploring the JohnsonYears, edited by Robert A. Divine, pp.93-125. Austin: University ofTexas Press, 1981. (X.800/32089)

------------ “Freedom Then, Freedom Now: the Historiography of theCivil Rights Movement.” American Historical Review 96, no. 2(1991): 456-71. (P.P.3437.baa)

LESTER, JULIUS. Search for the New Land: History as SubjectiveExperience. New York: Dial Press, 1969, 195pp. (X.809/13217)

LEVINE, MICHAEL L. African Americans and Civil Rights: from1619 to the Present. Phoenix: Oryx, 1996. (YC.1997.b.3855)

LEVY, PETER B., ed. Documentary History of the Civil RightsMovement. New York; London: Greenwood Press, 1992.(YC.1993.b.1785)

LEWIS, ANTHONY. Portrait of a Decade: the Second AmericanRevolution. New York: Random House, 1965, 322pp. (X.709/3718)

LEWIS, MICHAEL. “The Negro Protest in Urban America.” InProtest, Reform, and Revolt, edited by Joseph R. Gusfield, pp.149-90.New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1970. (X.800/4195)

LINCOLN, C. ERIC. “Patterns of Protest.” Christian Century 81, 3June 1964, pp.733-36. (14000.k.34(7))

LOMAX, LOUIS E. The Negro Revolt. London: Hamish Hamilton,1962, 288pp. (8183.f.4)

LYON, DANNY. Memories of the Southern Civil Rights Movement.(Lyndhurst Series on the South.) Chapel Hill: University of NorthCarolina Press for Duke University, Center for Documentary Studies,1992, 192pp. (LB.31.c.7355)

McADAM, DOUG. “Tactical Innovation and the Pace ofInsurgency.” American Sociological Review 48 (December 1983):735-54. (Ac.2285/2)

MACK, THURA and JANETTE PRESCOD. “The Struggle for CivilRights: a Selected Annotated Bibliography of Research Collectionsand U.S. Government Documents, 1963-1985.” Choice 28, no. 6(1991): 887-92. (3181.534500n)

MARABLE, MANNING. Race, Reform and Rebellion: the SecondReconstruction in Black America from 1945 to 1982. Basingstoke:Macmillan Education, 1991, 249pp. (YC.1991.a.3386)

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MASTON, THOMAS BUFFORD. Segregation and Desegregation: aChristian Approach. New York: Macmillan Co., 1959. (8298.b.2)

MEIER, AUGUST. “Dynamics of Crisis and Unity in the SouthernMovement.” New America, 10 January 1964, pp.4-5 (DSC:6081.786000n)

MEIER, AUGUST, ELLIOT RUDWICK and FRANCIS L.BRODERICK, eds. Black Protest Thought in the Twentieth Century.2nd ed. Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1971. (DSC: 85/09795)

MILLER, LOREN. “Farewell to Liberals.” The Nation, 20 October1962, pp.235-238. (BLNL)

MURRAY, PAUL T., Ed. The Civil Rights Movement: Referencesand Resources. New York: G.K. Hall; Oxford: Macmillan, 1993.(YA.1994.b.9232)

MUSE, BENJAMIN. The American Negro Revolution: fromNonviolence to Black Power, 1963-1967. Bloomington; London:University of Indiana Press, 1968, 406pp. (X.809/5785)

---------- Ten Years of Prelude: the Story of Integration Since theSupreme Court’s 1954 Decision. New York: Viking, 1964, 308pp.(X.529/971)

O’DELL, JACK H. “Climbin’ Jacob’s Ladder: the Life and Times ofthe Freedom Movement.” Freedomways 9, no. 1 (1969): 7-23.(DSC: 4033.362000)

PEEKS, EDWARD. The Long Struggle for Black Power. New York:Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1971, 448pp. (X.809/15742)

PETERS, WILLIAM. The Southern Temper. Garden City, NY:Doubleday, 1959, 283pp. (10413.m.39)

PIVEN, FRANCES F. and RICHARD CLOWARD. Poor People’sMovements: Why They Succeed, How They Fail. 1977. Reprint.New York: Vintage Books, 1979, 381pp. (X.520/13982)

POWLEDGE, FRED. Free At Last? The Civil Rights Movement andthe People Who Made It. Boston: Little, Brown & Co., 1991, 771pp.(YA.1993.b.6144)

ROBINSON, ARMSTEAD L. and PATRICIA SULLIVAN, eds. NewDirections in Civil Rights Studies. Charlottesville: University Press ofVirginia, 1991, 238pp. (DSC: 91/22657)

ROGERS, KIM LACY. “Oral History and the History of the CivilRights Movement.” Journal of American History 75, no. 2 (1988):567-76. (Ac.8408/2)

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ROLAND, CHARLES. The Improbable Era: the South Since WorldWar II. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1975, 228pp.(X.800/28425)

ROLLINS, JUDITH. “Part of a Whole: the Interdependence of theCivil Rights Movement and Other Social Movements.” Phylon 47,no. 1 (1986): 67-70. (Ac.2685.b/2)

ROSE, ARNOLD M., ed. The Negro Protest. Philadelphia: Annalsof the American Academy of Political and Social Sciences, vol. 357,1965, 214pp. (Ac.2383)

RUSTIN, BAYARD. “New Directions for the UnfinishedRevolution.” New America (24 September 1963): 6-7. (DSC:6081.786000)

---------- Strategies for Freedom: the Changing Patterns of BlackProtest. New York; Guildford: Columbia University Press, 1976.(X.529/30793)

SARRATT, REED. The Ordeal of Desegregation: the First Decade.New York; London: Harper & Row, [1966]. (X.529/6887)

SEEGER, PETE and BOB REISER. Everybody Says Freedom. NewYork: W.W. Norton & Co., 1989, 266pp. (YM.1990.b.460.)

SITKOFF, HARVARD. The Struggle for Black Equality, 1954-1980.New York: Hill & Wang, 1981, 259pp. (X.809/60625)

SMITH, CHARLES U. and LEWIS M. KILLIAN. “SociologicalFoundations of the Civil Rights Movement.” In Sociology inAmerica, edited by Herbert J. Gans, pp.105-116. Newbury Park, CA:Sage Publications, 1990. (YC.1991.a.1723)

SMITH, DONALD H. “Civil Rights: a Problem in Communication.”Phylon 27 (1966): 379-89. (Ac.2685.b.2)

SOLOMON, FREDERIC et al. “Civil Rights Activity and Reductionof Crime among Negroes.” Archives of General Psychiatry 12(1965): 227-36. (SRIS)

SWIFT, JEANNINE, ed. Dream and Reality: the Modern BlackStruggle for Freedom and Equality. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press,1991, 155pp. (YC.1992.b.3356)

VANDER ZANDEN, JAMES W. “The Nonviolent ResistanceMovement against Segregation.” American Journal of Sociology 68(March 1963): 540-50. (Ac.2691.d.12)

VANN WOODWARD, C. The Strange Career of Jim Crow. NewYork: Oxford University Press, 1955, 155pp. (08157.df.62)

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VIORST, MILTON. Fire in the Street: America in the 1960’s. NewYork: Simon & Schuster, 1979, 591pp. (X.520/32693)

WALKER, ALICE. “The Civil Rights Movement: What Good WasIt?” American Scholar 36 (Autumn 1967): 550-54. (P.P.6365.b.9)

WALKER, WYATT T. “The Techniques of Winning Freedom Now.”Negro Digest (March 1964): 6-10. (DSC: 6075.155000)

WARREN, ROBERT PENN. Who Speaks for the Negro? New York:Random House, 1965, 454pp. (X.529/62593)

WASKOW, ARTHUR I. From Race Riot to Sit-in: 1919 and the1960s. Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1967, 380pp. (X.808/4702)

WATTERS, PAT. Down to Now: Reflections on the Southern CivilRights Movement. New York: Pantheon Books, 1971, 426pp.(X.809/1759)

---------- “The Spring Offensive: Negroes Plan the Future.” TheNation, 3 February 1964, pp.117-20. (BLNL)

WEISBROT, ROBERT. Freedom Bound: a History of the CivilRights Movement. New York: W.W. Norton & Co., 1990, 350pp.(YC.1992.b.61)

WEST, CORNEL. “The Paradox of the Afro-American Rebellion.”In The Sixties without Apology, edited by Stanley Aronowitz, pp.44-58. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1984.(YA.1989.b.4278)

WESTIN, ALAN F. ed. Freedom Now! The Civil Rights Struggle inAmerica. New York: Basic Books, 1964, 346pp. (X.709/1394)

WEXLER, SANFORD. The Civil Rights Movement: an EyewitnessHistory. New York: Facts on File, 1993, 356pp. (YC.1994.b.40606)

WIGGINS, DAVID K. “‘The Year of Awakening’: Black Athletes,Racial Unrest and the Civil Rights Movement of 1968.” InternationalJournal of the History of Sport 9, no. 2 (1992): 188-208.(ZK.9.a.1260)

WILLIAMS, JUAN. Eyes on the Prize: America’s Civil RightsYears, 1954-1965. New York: Viking, 1987, 320pp.(YH.1988.b.717)

WILSON, JAMES Q. “The Strategy of Protest: Problems of NegroCivic Action.” Journal of Conflict Resolution 5 (September 1961):291-303. (Ac.2685.at)

WIRMARK, BO. “Nonviolent Methods and the American CivilRights Movement, 1955-1965.” Journal of Peace Research 11(1974): 115-32. (P.P.8004.nx)

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WYNN, DANIEL W. The Black Protest Movement. New York:Philosophical Library, 1974, 258pp. (X.809/24875)

X, MALCOLM. “Black Muslims and Civil Rights.” Playboy (May1963): 53-63. (Cup.804.e.8)

ZANGRANDO, ROBERT L. “From Civil Rights to BlackLiberation: the Unsettled 1960s.” Current History 56, no. 7 (1969):281-99. (P.P.4048.bd)

ZANGRANDO, ROBERT L. “Manuscript Sources for TwentiethCentury Civil Rights Research.” Journal of American History 74(June 1987): 243-51. (Ac.8408/2)

ZINN, HOWARD. The Southern Mystique. New York: Alfred A.Knopf, 1964, 267pp. (X.809/3519)

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PHASES OF THE MOVEMENT

ORIGINS

BELKNAP, MICHAEL R. The Drive to Desegregate Places of PublicAccomodation. New York; London: Garland, 1991. (YC.1993.b.410)

BERMAN, WILLIAM C. The Politics of Civil Rights in the TrumanAdministration. Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 1970, 261pp.(X.809/15789)

BRISBANE, ROBERT H. The Black Vanguard: Origins of the NegroSocial Revolution, 1900-1960. Valley Forge, PA: Judson Press, 1970,285pp. (X.809/12023)

DALFIUME, RICHARD M. “The ‘Forgotten Years’ of the NegroRevolution.” Journal of American History 55, no. 1 (1968): 90-106.(Ac.8408/2)

DAVIES, JAMES C. “The J-Curve of Rising and DecliningSatisfactions as a Cause of Some Great Revolutions and a ContainedRebellion.” In The History of Violence in America: Historical andComparative Perspectives, edited by Hugh Davis Graham and TedRobert Gurr, pp.690-730. New York; London: Praeger Publishers,1969. (X.200/3407)

GESCHWENDER, JAMES A. “Social Structure and the NegroRevolt: an Examination of Some Hypotheses.” Social Forces 43, no.2 (1964): 248-56. (P.P.8001.fc)

GRANT, SONIA, ed. The Dawning of the Civil Rights Movement inthe United States; and Marx and Some Marxists on Race. London:Harvey and Young, 1995. (YC.1995.b.5292)

GRAVES, CARL R. “The Right to Be Served: Oklahoma City’sLunch Counter Sit-Ins, 1958-1964.” Chronicles of Oklahoma 59(Summer 1981): 361-73. (Ac.8484)

JONES, BEVERLY W. “Before Montgomery and Greensboro: theDesegregation Movement in the District of Columbia, 1950-1953.”Phylon 43, no. 2, (1982): 144-54. (Ac.2685.b/2)

MABEE, CARLETON. “Two Decades of Sit-ins: the Evolution ofNon-Violence.” The Nation, 12 August 1961, pp.78-81. (P.P.6392.e)

MCADAM, DOUG. Political Process and the Development of BlackInsurgency, 1930-1970. Chicago; London: University of ChicagoPress, 1982, 304pp. (DSC: 83/01811)

------------ and KELLY MOORE. “The Politics of Black Insurgency,1930-1973.” In Violence in America: Protest, Rebellion, Reform, 3rded., edited by Ted Robert Gurr, vol. 2, pp.255-85. Newbury Park,CA: Sage Publications, 1989. (DSC: 90/18879)

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MCCOY, DONALD and RICHARD T. RUETTEN. “The CivilRights Movement, 1949-1954.” Midwest Quarterly 11, (October1969): 11-34. (Ac.9234.te)

MCNEIL, GENNA RAE. Groundwork: Charles Hamilton Houstonand the Struggle for Civil Rights. Philadelphia: University ofPennsylvania Press, 1983, 308pp. (X.800/36676)

MEIER, AUGUST and ELLIOT RUDWICK. “The First FreedomRide.” Phylon 30 (1969): 213-22. (Ac.2685.b/2)

------------ “How CORE Began.” Social Science Quarterly 49 (March1969): 789-99. (Ac.9234.rx)

------------ “The Origins of Nonviolent Direct Action in Afro-American Protest: a Note on Historical Discontinuities.” In Along theColor Line: Explorations in the Black Experience. By August Meier& Elliott Rudwick, pp.307-404. Urbana; London: University ofIllinois Press, 1976. (X.520/11996)

MORRIS, ALDON D. The Origins of the Civil Rights Movement:Black Communities Organizing for Change. New York: Free Press,1984; London: Collier Macmillan, 1984, 354pp. (X.520/37054)

OPPENHEIMER, MARTIN. “The Movement: a Twenty-five YearRetrospective.” Monthly Review 36 (1985): 49-55. (P.701/11)

REED, MERL E. Seedtime for the Modern Civil Rights Movement:the President’s Committee on Fair Employment Practice, 1941-1946.Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1991.(YA.1993.b.8433)

TUSHNET, MARK V. The NAACP’s Legal Strategy againstSegregated Education, 1925-1950. Chapel Hill: University of NorthCarolina Press, 1987, 222pp. (YC.1991.b.4992)

WHITFIELD, STEPHEN I. A Death in the Delta: the Story ofEmmett Till. New York: Free Press; London: Collier Macmillan,1988. (DSC: 89/13240)

WILLIAMS, ROBIN M., Jr. “Social Change and Social Conflict:Race Relations in the United States, 1944-1964.” SociologicalInquiry 35 (Winter 1965): 15-24. (DSC: 8319.625000)

WOODS, BARBARA A. “Modjeska Simkins and the South CarolinaConference of the NAACP, 1939-1957.” In Women in the CivilRights Movement, edited by Vicki L. Crawford, Jacqueline AnneRouse, and Barbara Woods, pp.99-120. Brooklyn, NY: CarlsonPublishing, 1990. (YA.1992.b.4526)

YOUNG, REGINALD. The Dawning of the Civil Rights Movement inthe USA. London: Reginald Young, 1995. (YC.1995.a.3790)

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YOUNG, RICHARD P., ed. Roots of Rebellion: the Evolution ofBlack Politics and Protest Since World War II. New York: Harper &Row, 1970, 482pp. (X.708/7014)

SCHOOOL DESEGREGATION

ARMOR, DAVID J. Forced Justice: School Desegregation and theLaw. New York; Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1995.(YC.1995.b.6428)

BAGWELL, WILLIAM. School Desegregation in the Carolinas: TwoCase Studies. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 1972,341pp. (X.529/17143)

BELKNAP, MICHAEL R. Desegregation in Public Education. NewYork: Garland, 1991. (YC.1992.b.815)

BLAUSTEIN, ALBERT P. and CLARENCE CLYDE FERGUSON,Jr. Desegregation and the Law: the Meaning and Effect of the SchoolSegregation Cases. 2nd ed. New York: Vintage Books, 1962, 359pp.(5321.aa.4)

BLOSSOM, VIRGIL T. It Has Happened Here: on the DisordersFollowing the Racial Integration of Schools in Little Rock, Arkansas.New York: Harper & Row, 1959, 209pp. (8356.p.54)

BROWN, ROBERT RAYMOND. Bigger than Little Rock: anAccount of the Situation in Little Rock, Arkansas, in September 1957.Greenwich, CT: Seabury Press; 1958, 150pp. (4769.ee.35)

CAMPBELL, ERNEST QUEENER. “Men of God in Racial Crisis.”Christian Century, 4 June 1958, pp.663-65. (P.P.6392.ebd)

---------- “Racial and Moral Crisis: the Role of Little Rock Ministers.”American Journal of Sociology 64, no. 5 (1959): 509-16.(Ac.2691.d/12)

---------- “Vignettes from Little Rock.” Christianity and Crisis, 29September 1958, pp.128-36. (P.101/57)

---------- and THOMAS FRASER PETTIGREW. Christians in RacialCrisis: A Study of Little Rock’s Ministry...Including Statements onDesegregation and Race Relations by the Leading ReligiousDenominations of the United States. Washington, DC: Public AffairsPress, [1959], 196pp. (4184.d.2)

CRAIN, ROBERT L. The Politics of School Desegregation:Comparative Case Studies of Community Structure and Policy-Making. National Opinion Research Center Monographs in SocialResearch. Chicago: Aldine Publishing Co., 1968, 390pp.(X.529/11975)

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CROWTHER, EDWARD R. “Alabama’s Fight to MaintainSegregated Schools, 1953-1956.” Alabama Review 43, no. 3 (1990):206-225. (P.P.7612.og)

CULPEPPER, CLARK E. The Schoolhouse Door: Segregation’s LastStand at the University of Alabama. New York; Oxford: OxfordUniversity Press, 1993. (YC.1993.b.7863)

DURAM, JAMES C. A Moderate Among Extremists: Dwight D.Eisenhower and the School Desegregation Crisis. Chicago: Nelson-Hall Publishers, 1981, 306pp. (X.809/60264)

DYKEMAN, WILMA and JAMES STOKELY. “Courage in Actionin Clinton, Tennessee.” The Nation, 22 December 1956, pp.531-33.(P.P.6392.e)

EDWARDS, THOMAS BENTLEY and FREDERICK MARSHALLWIRT, EDS. School Desegregation in the North: the Challenge andthe Experience. San Francisco: Chandler Publishing Co., [1967],352pp. (X.520/3689)

FREYER, TONY. The Little Rock Crisis: a ConstitutionalInterpretation. Westport, CT; London: Greenwood Press, 1984,186pp. (YC.1986.a.1278)

GATES, ROBBINS L. The Making of Massive Resistance: Virginia’sPolitics of Public School Desegregation, 1954-56. Chapel Hill:University of North Carolina Press, [1964], 222pp. (X.520/1391)

GRAGLIA, LINO S. Disaster by Decree: the Supreme CourtDecisions on Race and the Schools. Ithaca, NY; London: CornellUniversity Press, 1976, 351pp. (X.203/2058)

HUCKABY, ELIZABETH. Crisis at Central High: Little Rock,1957-58. Baton Rouge; London: Louisiana State University Press,1980, 222pp. (X.800/29652)

INGER, MORTON. Politics and Reality in an American City: theNew Orleans School Crisis of 1960. New York: Center for UrbanEducation, 1969, 114pp. (X.700/6624)

JONES, LEON. From Brown to Boston: Desegregation in Education,1954-1974. 2 vols. Metuchen, NJ; London: Scarecrow Press, 1979,2175pp. (X.529/34088)

KALODNER, HOWARD I. and JAMES J. FISHMAN, eds. Limits ofJustice: the Courts’ Role in School Desegregation. Cambridge:Ballinger, 1978. (X.200/31846)

KAMP, JOSEPH PETER. The Lowdown on Little Rock and the Plotto Sovietize the South. Westport, CT: Headlines, [1957], 38pp.(X.909/26625)

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KLUGER, RICHARD. Simple Justice: the History of Brown v. Boardof Education and Black America’s Struggle for Equality. London:Deutsch, 1977. (X.200/30994)

McMILLEN, NEIL R. “Organized Resistance to SchoolDesegregation in Tennessee.” Tennessee Historical Quarterly 30(Fall 1971): 315-28. (Ac.8471/2)

MAYER, MICHAEL S. “With Much Deliberation and Some Speed:Eisenhower and the Brown Decision.” Journal of Southern History 54(1986): 43-76. (Ac.8542.a)

METCALF, GEORGE R. From Little Rock to Boston: the History ofSchool Segregation. Westport; London: Greenwood Press, 1983.(X.520/34301)

MURPHY, SARA ALDERMAN. Breaking the Silence: Little Rock’sWomen’s Emergency Committee to Open Our Schools, 1958-1963.Fayetteville: University of Arkansas Press, 1997. (YA.1997.b.5995)

MUSE, BENJAMIN. Ten Years of Prelude: the Story of IntegrationSince the Supreme Court’s 1954 Decision. New York: Viking, 1964,308pp. (X.529/971)

NORTON, PHILIP. Eisenhower and Little Rock: a Case Study inPresidential Decision Making. Hull: University of Hull, 1979.(X.702/6478)

O’BRIEN, THOMAS. “Georgia’s Response to Brown vs. Board ofEducation, 1954-1961.” Proceedings of the South Carolina HistoricalAssociation 1992: 55-66. (DSC: 6820.800000n)

ORFIELD, GARY. The Reconstruction of Southern Education: theSchools and the 1964 Civil Rights Act. New York: Chichester Wiley-Interscience 1969, 376pp. (X.520/706)

PANETTA, LEON. Bring Us Together: the Nixon Team and theCivil Rights Retreat. Philadelphia: Lippincott, 1971, 380pp.(X.809/15465)

PELTASON, JACK W. Fifty-Eight Lonely Men: Southern FederalJudges and School Desegregation. New York: Harcourt, Brace andWorld, 1961, 270pp. (X.200/1761)

QUAY, RICHARD H. In Pursuit of Equality of EducationalOpportunity: a Selective Bibliography and Guide to the ResearchLiterature. New York; London: Garland Publishing, 1977, 173pp.(X.529/34230)

SANSING, DAVID G. Making Haste Slowly: the Troubled History ofHigher Education in Mississippi. Jackson: University Press ofMississippi, 1990. (YA.1993.b.4855)

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SMITH, BOB. They Closed their School: Prince Edward County,Virginia, 1951-1964. Chapel Hill: University of North CarolinaPress, 1965, 281pp. (X.520/1434)

SARRATT, REED. The Ordeal of Desegregation: the First Decade.New York; London: Harper & Row, [1966]. (X.529/6887)

SPITZBERG, IRVING J. Racial Politics in Little Rock, 1954-64. NewYork; London: Garland, 1987. (YC.1987.a.7138)

TUMIN, MELVIN MARVIN. Desegregation: Resistance andReadiness. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1958.(10414.bb.58)

TUSHNET, MARK V. The NAACP’s Legal Strategy againstSegregated Education, 1925-1950. Chapel Hill; London: Universityof North Carolina Press, 1987, 222pp. (YC.1991.b.4992)

VANDER ZANDEN, JAMES W. “Accommodation to UndesiredChange: the Case of the South.” Journal of Negro Education 31(1962): 30-35. (P.P.8003.og)

------------ “Turmoil in the South.” Journal of Negro Education 29(Fall 1960): 445-52. (P.P.8003.og)

WASBY, STEPHEN LEWIS. Desegregation from Brown toAlexander: an Exploration of Supreme Court Strategies. Carbondale:Southern Illinois University Press, 1977. (X.200/31013)

BUS BOYCOTTS

AUSTIN, ALEINE. “Behind the Montgomery Bus Boycott.” MonthlyReview 8 (September 1956): 163-67. (P.701/11)

BURKS, MARY FAIR. “Trailblazers: Women in the MontgomeryBus Boycott.” In Women in the Civil Rights Movement, edited byVicki L Crawford, Jacqueline Anne Rouse and Barbara Woods,pp.71-83. Brooklyn, NY: Carlson Publishing, 1990.(YA.1992.b.4526)

DYKEMAN, WILMA and JAMES STOKELY. “MontgomeryMorning.” The Nation, 5 January 1957, pp.11-14. (BLNL)

ESKEW, GLENN T. “The Alabama Christian Movement for HumanRights and the Birmingham Struggle for Civil Rights, 1956-1963.” InBirmingham, Alabama, 1956-1963: the Black Struggle for CivilRights, edited by David J. Garrow. Brooklyn, NY: CarlsonPublishing, 1989. (YA.1991.b.8355)

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GARDNER, TOM. “The Montgomery Bus Boycott: Interviews withRosa Parks, E. D. Nixon, Johnny Carr, and Virginia Durr.” SouthernExposure 9, no. 1 (1981): 13-21. (P.P.701/1584)

GARROW, DAVID J., ed. Birmingham, Alabama, 1956-1963: theBlack Struggle for Civil Rights. Brooklyn, NY: Carlson Publishing,1989, 299pp. (YA.1991.b.8355)

------------ “The Origins of the Montgomery Bus Boycott.” SouthernChanges 7 (1985): 21-27. (DSC: 8352.965000)

GLENNON, ROBERT JEROME. “The Role of Law in the CivilRights Movement: the Montgomery Bus Boycott, 1955-1957.” Lawand History Review 9, no. 1 (1991): 59-112. (DSC: 5161.351500)

HARTZ, JENNIFER. “Simply Exercising Our Rights as Citizens:” theDesegregation of Public Transportation in Shreveport, Louisiana,1956-1972. North Louisiana Historical Association Journal 22, no. 4(1991): 125-38. (DSC: 4833.825000)

JOHNSON, WALTER. “Historians Join the March on Montgomery.”South Atlantic Quarterly 79, no. 2 (1980): 158-74. (P.P.6338)

REDDICK, L. D. “The Bus Boycott in Montgomery.” Dissent 3, no.2 (1956): 107-117. (P.P.3558.iwa) ROBINSON, JO ANN GIBSON. The Montgomery Bus Boycott andthe Women Who Started It: the Memoir of Jo Ann Gibson Robinson.Edited by David J. Garrow. Knoxville: University of TennesseePress, 1987, 190pp. (YH.1989.a.623)

STEVENSON, JANET. “Rosa Parks Wouldn’t Budge.” AmericanHeritage 23, no. 2 (1972): 56-64. (P.P.3437.aga)

THORNTON, J. MILLS, III. “Challenge and Response in theMontgomery Bus Boycott of 1955-1956.” The Alabama Review 33(July 1980): 163-235. (P.P.7612.og)

VALIEN, PRESTON. “The Montogomery Bus Protest as a SocialMovement.” In Race Relations, edited by Jitsuichi Masuoka andPreston Valien, pp.112-127. Chapel Hill: University of NorthCarolina Press, 1961. (X.800/1788)

WALTON, NORMAN W. “The Walking City: a History of theMontgomery Bus Boycott.” Negro History Bulletin from October1956 to January 1958. (DSC: 6075.170000)

SIT-INS

CHAFE, WILLIAM. “The Greensboro Sit-ins.” Southern Exposure 6(Fall 1978): 78-87. (P.701/1584)

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------------ “The Greensboro Sit-ins.” Southern Exposure 6 (Fall1978): 78-87. (P.701/1584)

FISHMAN, JACOB R. and FREDERIC SOLOMON. “Youth andSocial Action: Perspectives on the Student Sit-ins Movement.”American Journal of Orthopsychiatry 33 (1963): 872-82.(P.P.8004.fe)

GRAVES, CARL R. “The Right to Be Served: Oklahoma City’sLunch Counter Sit-ins, 1958-1964.” Chronicles of Oklahoma 59(Summer 1981): 361-73. (Ac.8484)

MABEE, CARLETON. “Two Decades of Sit-ins: Evolution of Non-Violence.” The Nation, 12 August 1961, pp.78-81. (P.P.6392.e.)

MEIER, AUGUST. “The Successful Sit-ins in a Border City: a Studyin Social Causation.” Journal of Intergroup Relations 2 (Summer1961): 230-37. (DSC: 5007.548500)

MORRIS, ALDON. “Black Southern Student Sit-in Movement: anAnalysis of Internal Organization.” American Sociological Review46, no. 6 (1981): 744-67. (Ac.2285/2)

OPPENHEIMER, MARTIN. “Institutions of Higher Learning and the1960 Sit-ins: Some Clues for Social Action.” Journal of NegroEducation 32 (Summer 1963): 286-88. (P.P.8003.og)

------------ “The Movement: A Twenty-five Year Retrospective.”Monthly Review 36 (1985): 49-55. (P.701/11)

------------ “The Southern Student Sit-ins: Intra-Group Relations andCommunity Conflict.” Phylon 27, no. 1 (1966): 20-26. (Ac.2685.b/2)

ORUM, ANTHONY M. and AMY W. ORUM. “The Class andStatus Bases of Negro Student Protest.” Social Science Quarterly 49,no. 3 (1968): 521-33. (Ac.9234.rx)

PINARD, MAURICE, JEROME KIRK and DONALD VONESCHEN. “Processes of Recruitment in the Sit-in Movement.”Public Opinion Quarterly 33 (Fall 1969): 355-69. (P.P.6392.eck)

POLLITT, DANIEL H. “Dime Store Demonstrations: Events andLegal Problems of the First Sixty Days.” Duke Law Journal 10(Summer 1960): 315-65. (DSC: 3630.950000)

PROUDFOOT, MERRILL. Diary of a Sit-in. Urbana: University ofIllinois Press, 1990. (YA.1993.a.17383)

REDDICK, L. D. “The State vs. the Student.” Dissent 7 (Summer1960): 219-28. (P.P.3558.iwa)

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SEARLES, RUTH and J. ALLEN WILLIAMS, Jr. “Negro CollegeStudents: Participation in Sit-ins.” Social Forces 40 (March 1962):215-20. (P.P.8001.fc)

SESSIONS, JIM and SUE THRASHER. “A New Day Begins: anInterview with John Lewis.” Southern Exposure 4 (Fall 1979): 14-24.(P.701/1584)

SMITH, CHARLES U. “The Sit-ins and the New Negro Student.”Journal of Intergroup Relations 2 (1961): 223-29. (DSC:5007.548500)

SOLOMON, FREDERIC and JACOB R. FISHMAN. “Youth andSocial Action: II. Action Identity Formation in the First Student Sit-in Demonstration.” Journal of Social Issues 29, no. 2 (1964): 36-47.(P.P.8003.og)

VON ESCHEN, DONALD, JEROME KIRK and MAURICEPINARD. “The Organizational Substructure of Disorderly Politics.”Social Forces 49 (1971): 529-43. (SPIS)

WALZER, MICHAEL. “A Cup of Coffee and a Seat.” Dissent 7, no.2 (1960): 111-20. (P.P.3558.iwa)

WYNN, LINDA T. “The Dawning of a New Day: the Nashville Sit-ins, February 13-May 10, 1960.” Tennessee Historical Quarterly 50,no. 1 (1991): 42-54. (Ac.8471/2)

ZINN, HOWARD. “Abolitionists, Freedom Riders, and the Tacticsof Agitation.” In The Antislavery Vanguard, edited by MartinDuberman, pp.417-51. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1965.(X.529/2144)

FREEDOM RIDES

BARNES, CATHERINE A. Journey from Jim Crow: theDesegregation of Southern Transit. New York; Guildford: ColumbiaUniversity Press, 1983. (X.800/39329)

GOLDMAN, ERID F. “Progress by Moderation and Agitation.” NewYork Times Magazine, 18 June 1961. (BLNL)

LOMAX, LOUIS E. “The Freedom Rides.” In The Negro Revolt byLouis E. Lomax. New York: Harper & Row, 1962. (8183.f.4)

------------ “The Unpredictable Negro.” In Freedom Now! The CivilRights Struggle in America, edited by Alan F. Westin, pp.22-24. NewYork: Basic Books, 1964. (X.709/1394)

MEIER, AUGUST and ELLIOT RUDWICK. “The First FreedomRide.” Phylon 30, no. 3 (1969): 213-22. (Ac.2685)

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SESSIONS, JIM and SUE THRASHER. “A New Day Begins: anInterview with John Lewis.” Southern Exposure 4 (Fall 1976): 14-24pp. (P.701/1584)

VOTER REGISTRATION AND THE VOTING RIGHTS ACTOF 1965

ABNEY, GLENN F. “Factors Related to Negro Voter Turnout inMississippi.” Journal of Politics 36 (November 1974): 1057-63.(P.P.6392.ecx)

BELFRAGE, SALLY. Freedom Summer. New York: Viking, 1965,246pp. (X.809/2064)

BELKNAP, MICHAEL R. Voting Rights. New York; London:Garland, 1991. (YC.1992.b.817)

BRAVERMAN, MIRIAM. “Mississippi Summer.” Library Journal90 (15 November 1965): 5045-47. (P.P.6491.h)

BULLOCK, CHARLES S., III. “Congressional Voting and theMobilization of a Black Electorate in the South.” Journal of Politics43 (August 1981): 662-82. (P.P.6392.ecx)

COLBY, DAVID C. “The Voting Rights Act and Black Registrationin Mississippi.” Publius 16 (Fall 1986): 123-37. (P.521/2322)

COLES, ROBERT and JOSEPH BRENNER. “American Youth in aSocial Struggle: the Mississippi Summer Project.” American Journalof Orthopsychiatry 35 (October 1965): 907-26. (DSC: 0829.250000)

DEMUTH, JERRY. “Summer in Mississippi: Freedom Moves in toStay.” The Nation, 14 September 1976, pp.104-110. (BLNL)

EDDS, MARGARET. Free at Last: What Really Happened WhenCivil Rights Came to Southern Politics. Bethesda, MD: Adler &Adler, 1987, 277pp. (YA.1989.b.7893)

FINDLAY, JAMES. “In Keeping with the Prophets: the MississippiSummer of 1964.” Christian Century, 8-15 June 1988, pp.574-76.(P.P.6392.ebd)

FOSTER, LORN S. “The Voting Rights Act: Black Voting and theNew Southern Politics.” Western Journal of Black Studies 7, no. 3(1983): 120-29. (DSC: 9300.829000)

GARROW, DAVID J. Protest at Selma: Martin Luther King, Jr., andthe Voting Rights Act of 1965. New Haven; London: Yale UniversityPress, 1979. (X.700/26281)

GOOD, PAUL. “Beyond the Voting Rights Act.” The Reporter, 7October 1965, pp.25-29. (X.800/26003)

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HAMILTON, CHARLES V. The Bench and the Ballot: SouthernFederal Judges and Black Voting Rights. New York: OxfordUniversity Press, 1973, 258pp. (X.200/8891)

------------ “Southern Judges and Negro Voting: the Judicial Approachto the Solution of Controversial Social Problems.” Wisconsin LawReview 65 (Winter 1965): 71-102. (DSC: 9325.770000)

HOLT, LEN. The Summer That Didn’t End. London: Heinemann,1966, 351pp. (X.709/2648)

JOUBERT, PAUL E. and BEN M. “Mississippi Blacks and theVoting Rights Act of 1965.” Journal of Negro Education 46 (Spring1977): 157-67. (P.P.8003.og)

KEECH, WILLIAM R. The Impact of Negro Voting: the Role of theVote in the Quest of Equality. Chicago: Rand McNally & Co., 1968,113pp. (X.800/5095)

------------ “Political Participation and Political Structures: the VotingRights Act of 1965.” Phylon 41, no. 1 (1980): 25-35. (Ac.2685.b/2)

KERNELL, SAM. “Comment: a Re-Evaluation of Black Voting inMississippi.” American Political Science Review 67, no. 4 (1973):1307-18. (Ac.2380/b)

KNICKREHM, KAY M. and DEVIN BENT. “Voting Rights, VoterTurnout and Realignment: the Impact of the 1965 Voting Rights Act.”Journal of Black Studies 18 (March 1988): 283-96. (DSC:4954.200000)

LAWSON, STEVEN F. Black Ballots: Voting Rights in the South,1944-1969. New York: Guildford: Columbia University Press, 1976,474pp. (X.100/16819)

------------ In Pursuit of Power: Southern Blacks and ElectoralPolitics, 1965-1982. New York; Guildford: Columbia UniversityPress, 1985, 391pp. (X.800/42176)

------------ “Preserving the Second Reconstruction: Enforcement ofthe Voting Rights Act, 1965-1975.” Southern Studies 22, no. 1(1983): 55-75. (DSC: 8356.030000)

------------ Running for Freedom Civil Rights Movement 1941.Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1991. (YA.1991.a.18681)

------------ and MARK I. GELFAND. “Consensus and Civil Rights:Lyndon B. Johnson and the Black Franchise.” Prologue 8 (Summer1976): 65-76. (A.S.288/54)

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LEVESQUE, RUSSELL J. “White Response to Nonwhite VoterRegistration in the Southern States.” Pacific Sociological Review 15(April 1972): 245-55. (P.P.8004.qr)

LEWIS, JOHN and ARCHIE ALLEN. “Black Voter Registration inthe South.” Notre Dame Lawyer 48 (October 1972): 105-32. (DSC:6175.50000)

LICHTMAN, ALLAN. “The Federal Assault against VotingDiscrimination in the Deep South, 1957-1967.” Journal of NegroHistory 54 (October 1969): 346-67. (Ac.8444)

MCADAM, DOUG. Freedom Summer. New York; Oxford: OxfordUniversity Press, 1988, 322pp. (YH.1990.b.55)

---------- “Recruitment to High Risk Activism: the Case of FreedomSummer.” American Journal of Sociology 92, no. 1 (1986): 64-90.(Ac.2691.d/12)

MCMILLEN, NEIL R. “Black Enfranchisement in Mississippi:Federal Enforcement and Black Protest in the 1960s.” Journal ofSouthern History 43, no. 3 (1977): 351-72. (Ac.8542.a)

MARSHALL, BURKE. “Federal Protection of Negro VotingRights.” Law and Contemporary Problems 27 (Summer 1962): 455-67. (Ac.2685.kac)

MATTHEWS, DONALD R. and JAMES W. PROTHRO. “Socialand Economic Factors and Negro Voter Registration in the South.”American Political Science Review 57 (March 1963): 24-22.(Ac.2380/2)

PARKER, FRANK R. Black Votes Count: Political Empowerment inMississippi after 1965. Chapel Hill: University of North CarolinaPress, 1990, 254pp. (DSC: 90/20339)

ROTHSCHILD, MARY AICKIN. A Case of Black and White:Northern Volunteers and the Southern Freedom Summers, 1964-1965.Westport, CT; London: Greenwood Press, 1982, 213pp.(X.809/56715)

------------ “White Women Volunteers in the Freedom Summers: theirLife and Work in a Movement for Social Change.” Feminist Studies5, no. 3 (1979): 466-95. (DSC: 3905.197700)

SALAMON, LESTER and STEPHEN VAN EVERA. “Fear, Apathy,and Discrimination: a Test of Three Explanations of PoliticalParticipation.” American Political Science Review 67, no. 4 (1973):1288-1306. (Ac.2380/2)

SITTON, CLAUDE. “Bullets and Ballots in Greenwood,Mississippi.” In Freedom Now! The Struggle for Civil Rights in

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America, edited by Alan F. Westin, pp.87-94. New York: BackBooks, 1964. (X.709/1394)

STRONG, DONALD S. Negroes, Ballots, and Judges. Tuscaloosa:University of Alabama Press, 1968, 100pp. (X.809/9877)

THERNSTROM, ABIGAIL. “The Odd Evolution of the VotingRights Act.” Public Interest 55 (Spring 1979): 49-76. (DSC:6967.100000)

THOMPSON, KENNETH H. The Voting Rights Act and BlackElectoral Participation. Washington, DC: Joint Center for PoliticalStudies, 1982, 45pp. (DSC: 85/10919)

WIRT, FREDERICK M. The Politics of Southern Equality: Law andChange in a Mississippi County. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press,1970, 335pp. (X.800/7514)

BLACK POWER

ABERBACH, JOEL D. and JACK L. WALKER. “The Meanings ofBlack Power: a Comparison of White and Black Interpretations of aPolitical Slogan.” American Political Science Review 64 (1970): 367-88. (Ac.2380/2)

ADLER, RENATA. “The Meredith Mississippi March.” New Yorker,16 July 1966, pp.21-25. (Cup.702.e.1)

BARBOUR, FLOYD B., ed. The Black Power Revolt: a Collection ofEssays. Boston: Porter Sargent, 1968, 287pp. (X.809/8374)

BENSON, J. KENNETH. “Militant Ideologies and OrganizationalContexts: the War on Poverty and the Ideology of ‘Black Power.’” InSocial Movements and Social Change, edited by R. J. Lauer, pp.107-20. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1976.(X.800/26006)

BLACK PANTHER PARTY. The Black Panther Party. (Speech byJohn Hullet. Interview with Stokely Carmichael. Report fromLowndes County. By John Benson.) New York: Merritt Publishers,1966, 30pp. (X.700/9161)

CARMICHAEL, STOKELY. Stokely Speaks: Black Power to Pan-Africanism. New York: Random House, 1971, 229pp. (X.809/15822)

------------ “What We Want.” New York Review of Books, 22September, 1966, pp.5-7. (P.P.7611.nr)

------------ and CHARLES V. HAMILTON. Black Power: the Politicsof Liberation in America. New York: Random House, 1967, 198pp.(X.709/6752)

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------------ and MIKE THELWELL. “Toward Black Liberation.”Massachusetts Review 7, no. 4 (1966): 639-51. (P.P.7615.hd)

CLARK, KENNETH B. “The Present Dilemma of the Negro.”Journal of Negro History 53 (January 1968): 1-11. (Ac.8444)

DANZIG, DAVID. “In Defense of ‘Black Power.’” Commentary(September 1966): 41-46. (P.P.15.abc)

DUBERMAN, MARTIN. “Black Power and the American RadicalTradition.” In Dissent: Explorations in the History of AmericanRadicalism, edited by Alfred F. Young, pp.301-317. DeKalb:Northern Illinois University Press, 1980. (X.809/53369)

FELDMAN, PAUL. “The Pathos of ‘Black Power.’” Dissent 14(January-February 1967): 69-79. (P.P.3558.iwa)

FORMAN, JAMES. The Making of Black Revolutionaries. 2nd ed.Washington, DC: Open Hand Publishing, 1985, 568pp.(YA.1989.b.6240)

GESCHWENDER, JAMES A. “The Changing Role of Violence inthe Black Revolt.” Sociological Symposium 9 (1973): 1-5.(8319.650100)

----------- “Civil Rights Protest and Riots: a Disappearing Distinction.”Social Science Quarterly 49 (December 1968): 471-784.(Ac.9234.rx)

GOOD, PAUL. “A White Look at Black Power.” The Nation, 8August 1966, pp.112-17. (P.P.6392.e)

GRAHAM, HUGH DAVIS. “The Storm over Black Power.”Virginia Quarterly Review 43 (Autumn 1967): 545-65. (Ac.2691.ta/4)

HAINES, HERBERT M. Black Radicals and the Civil RightsMainstream, 1954-1970. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press,1989. (YA.1989.b.6372)

HARDING, VINCENT. “Black Radicalism: the Road fromMontgomery.” In Dissent: Explorations in the History of AmericanRadicalism, edited by Alfred F. Young, pp.319-54. DeKalb: NorthernIllinois University Press, 1980. (X.809/53369)

HOUGH, JOSEPH C., Jr. Black Power and White Protestants: aChristian Response to the New Negro Pluralism. New York: OxfordUniversity Press, 1968, 228pp. (X.100/6359)

HUBBARD, HOWARD. “Five Long Hot Summers and How TheyGrew.” Public Interest 12 (Summer 1968): 3-24. (DSC:6967.100000)

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JACK, HOMER A. “Black Power and the Meredith March.” GandhiMarg 10 (October 1966): 285-302. (P.701/517)

KILLIAN, LEWIS M. “The Significance of Extremism in the BlackRevolution.” Social Problems 20, no. 1 (1972): 41-48. (P.521/945)

KOPKIND, ANDREW. “The Future of Black Power.” New Republic,7 January 1967, pp.16-18. (BLNL)

----------- “In the Lair of the Black Panther.” New Republic, 13 August1966, pp.10-13. (BLNL)

----------- “Soul Power.” New York Review of Books, 24 August 1967,pp.3-6. (P.P.7611.nr)

LADNER, JOYCE. “What ‘Black Power’ Means to Negroes inMississippi.” Trans-action 5 (November 1967): 7-15. (P.P.8002.zr)

LEONARD, EDWARD A. “Nonviolence and Violence in AmericanRacial Protest, 1942-1967.” Rocky Mountain Social Science Journal6 (1969): 10-22. (P.521/1277)

LESTER, JULIUS. “The Angry Children of Malcolm X.” Sing Out17 (October 1966): 20-25. (P.P.7613.yl)

------------ . Look Out Whitey! Black Power’s Goin’ Get Your Mama.New York: Dial Press, 1968, 152pp. (X.809/1385)

MCADAM, DOUG. “The Decline of the Civil Rights Movement.”In Social Movements of the Sixties and Seventies, edited by JoFreeman, pp.279-329. New York: Longman, 1983. (X.529/55485)

MUSE, BENJAMIN. The American Negro Revolution: fromNonviolence to Black Power, 1963-1967. Bloomington; London:University of Indiana Press, 1968, 406pp. (X.809/5785)

NEWMAN, RICHARD. Black Power and Black Religion: Essays andReviews. West Cornwall, CT: Locust Hill Press, 1987.(YA.1989.a.19252)

PEARSON, HUGH. The Shadow of the Panther: Huey Newton andthe Price of Black Power in America. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley,1994. (YA.1996.b.709)

POWLEDGE, FRED. Black Power, White Resistance: Notes on theNew Civil War. Cleveland: World Publishing, 1967, 282pp.(YA.1988.b.1843)

POUSSAINT, ALVIN F. “How the ‘White Problem’ Spawned‘Black Power.’” Ebony, (August 1967): 88-94. (DSC: 3647.165000)

---------- “A Negro Psychiatrist Explains the Negro Psyche.” NewYork Times Magazine, 20 August 1967, p.55. (BLNL)

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ROBERTS, GENE. “The Story of Snick: from ‘Freedom High’ to‘Black Power’” New York Times Magazine, 25 September 1966,pp.27-29. (BLNL)

RUDWICK, ELLIOT and AUGUST MEIER. “Integration vs.Separatism: the NAACP and CORE Face Challenge from Within.” InAlong the Color Line, edited by August Meier and Elliot Rudwick,pp.238-64. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1976. (X.520/11996)

RUSTIN, BAYARD. “Black Power and Coalition Politics.”Commentary 42 (September 1966): 35-40. (P.P.15.abc)

------------ “From Protest to Politics: the Future of the Civil RightsMovement.” Commentary 39, no. 2 (1965): 25-31. (P.P.15.abc)

THOMAS, CURLEW O. and BARBARA BOSTON THOMAS.“Blacks’ Socio-economic Status and the Civil Rights Movement’sDecline, 1970-1979: an Examination of Some Hypotheses.” Phylon45, no. 1 (1984): 40-51. (Ac.2685.b/2)

VAN DEBURG, WILLIAM L. New Day in Babylon: the BlackPower Movement and American Culture, 1965-75. Chicago; London:University of Chicago Press, 1992. (YC.1993.b.2760)

VON ESCHEN, DONALD, JEROME KIRK and MAURICEPINARD. “The Disintegration of the Negro Non-ViolentMovement.” Journal of Peace Research 6, no. 3 (1969): 215-34.(P.P.800.nx)

WEHR, PAUL E. “Nonviolence and Differentiation in the EqualRights Movement.” Sociological Inquiry 38 (Winter 1968): 65-76.(DSC: 8319.625000)

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ORGANISATIONS

SNCC

ANDERSON, S. E. “Black Students: Racial Consciousness and theClass Struggle, 1960-1976.” Black Scholar 8 (January-February1977): 35-43. (DSC: 2107.200000)

BOND, JULIAN. “The Movement Then and Now.” SouthernExposure 3 (1976): 5-16. (P.701/1584)

BROWN, H. RAP. Die Nigger Die! London: Allison & Busby, 1970,117pp. (X.809/13720)

CARMICHAEL, STOKELY. What We Want. [Santa Clara, CA]:Santa Clara Friends of SNCC, [1966]. (Cup.711/855)

CARSON, CLAYBORNE, Jr. “Blacks and Jews in the Civil RightsMovement.” In Jews in Black Perspective: a Dialogue, edited byJoseph R. Washington, pp.113-31. Rutherford, NJ: FarleighDickinson University Press, 1984. (YH.1988.b.313)

------------ In Struggle: SNCC and the Black Awakening of the 1960’s.Cambridge; London: Harvard University Press, 1981, 359pp.(YH.1987.b.621)

------------ “SNCC and the Albany Movement.” Journal of SouthwestGeorgia History 2 (Fall 1984): 15-25. (DSC: 5066.057000n)

CLARK, KENNETH B. “The Civil Rights Movement: Momentumand Organization.” Daedalus 95, no. 1 (1966): 239-67. (Ac.1730/2)

FINDLAY, JAMES F., Jr. Church People in the Struggle: theNational Council of Churches and the Black Freedom Movement,1950-1970. New York: Oxford University Press, 1993, 255pp.(YC.1994.b.1637)

FLEMING, CYNTHIA GRIGGS. “Black Women Activists and theStudent Nonviolent Coordinating Committee: the Case of Ruby DorisSmith Robinson.” Journal of Women’s History 4, no. 3 (1993): 64-82.(ZA.9.a.6710)

FORMAN, JAMES. The Making of Black Revolutionaries. 2d ed.Washington, DC: Open Hand Publishing, 1985, 568pp.(YA.1989.b.6240)

FRUCHTER, NORM. “Mississippi: Notes on SNCC.” Studies onthe Left (Winter 1965): 74-80. (P.P.7613.kz)

GIDDINGS, PAULA. When and Where I Enter: the Impact of BlackWomen on Race and Sex in America. New York: William Morrow &Co., 1984, 408pp. (YA.1989.b.2826)

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GOOD, PAUL. “Odyssey of a Man and a Movement.” New YorkTimes Magazine, 25 June 1967. (BLNL)

HAYDEN, TOM. “SNCC: the Qualities of Protest.” Studies on theLeft 5 (1965): 113-24. (P.P.7613.kz)

KING, MARY. Freedom Song: a Personal Story of the 1960’s CivilRights Movement. New York: William Morrow & Co., 1987, 592pp.(YA.1989.b.6472)

KOPKIND, ANDREW. “The Future of Black Power.” New Republic,7 January 1967, pp.16-18. (BLNL)

------------ “New Radicals in Dixie: those Subversive Civil RightsWorkers.” New Republic, 10 April 1965, pp.13-16. (BLNL)

LADNER, JOYCE. “Return to the Source.” Essence, June 1977.(DSC: 3811.790950n)

LONG, MARGARET. “The Unity of the Rifting Negro Movement.”Progressive, February 1964, pp.10-14. (P.P.7599.baa)

MEIER, AUGUST. “Negro Protest Movements and Organizations.”Journal of Negro Education 32 (Fall 1963): 437-50. (P.P.8003.og)

MOSES, BOB. “Mississippi: 1961-1962.” Liberation 14 (January1970): 7-17. (DSC: 5186.680000)

NEWFIELD, JACK. A Prophetic Minority. New York: NewAmerican Library, 1966, 212pp. (X.709/6335)

PAYNE, CHARLES. “Ella Baker and Models of Social Change.”Signs 14, no. 4 (1989): 885-99. (P.521/2035)

ROBERTS, GENE. “The Story of Snick: from ‘Freedom High’ to‘Black Power’” New York Times Magazine, 25 September 1966,pp.27-29. (BLNL)

ROMAINE, ANNE. “Interview with Fannie Lou Hamer.” SouthernExposure (Spring 1981): 47-48. (P.701/1584)

ROTHSCHILD, MARY AICKIN. A Case of Black and White:Northern Volunteers and the Southern Freedom Summers, 1964-1965.Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1982, 213pp. (X.809/56715)

SESSIONS, JIM and SUE THRASHER. “A New Day Begins: anInterview with John Lewis.” Southern Exposure 4 (Fall 1976): 14-24.(P.701/1584)

SINSHEIMER, JOSEPH A. “Never Turn Back: an Interview withSam Block.” Southern Exposure 15 (Summer 1987): 37-50.(P.701/1584)

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STOPER, EMILY. The Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee:the Growth of Radicalism in a Civil Rights Organization. Brooklyn,NY: Carlson Publishing, 1989. (YA.1992.b.4419)

------------ “The Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee: Riseand Fall of a Redemptive Organization.” Journal of Black Studies 8(September 1977): 13-34. (P.701/1705)

WARREN, ROBERT PENN. “Two for SNCC.” Commentary 39(1965): 38-48. (P.P.15.abc)

WASHINGTON, CYNTHIA. “We Started from Different Ends ofthe Spectrum.” Southern Exposure 4, no. 4 (1977): 14-15.(P.701/1584)

------------ “The Negroes Enter Southern Politics.” Dissent (July-August 1966): 361-68. (P.P.3558.iwa)

------------ “Their Text is a Civil Rights Primer.” New York TimesMagazine, 20 December 1964. (BLNL)

ZINN, HOWARD. SNCC: the New Abolitionists. Boston: BeaconPress, 1964, 286pp. (X.529/6561)

SCLC

ABERNATHY, RALPH D. And the Walls Came Tumbling Down.New York: Harper & Row, 1989, 641pp. (DSC: 90/22729)

CLARK, KENNETH B. “The Civil Rights Movement: Momentumand Organization.” Daedalus 95, no. 1 (1966): 239-67. (Ac.1730/2)

CLARK, SEPTIMA P. “Literacy and Liberation.” Freedomways 4,no. 1 (1964): 113-24. (DSC: 4033.362000)

------------ Ready From Within: Septima Clark and the Civil RightsMovement. Edited by Cynthia S. Brown. Navarro, CA: Wild TreesPress, 1986, 134pp. (DSC: 89/25729)

COTTON, DOROTHY. “A Conversation with Ralph Abernathy.”Journal of Current Social Issues 9, no. 3 (1970): 21-30. (DSC:4965.920000)

FAIRCLOUGH, ADAM. “The Preachers and the People: the Originsand Early Years of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference,1955-1959.” Journal of Southern History 52 (1986): 403-40.(Ac.8542.a)

------------ “The Southern Christian Leadership Conference and theSecond Reconstruction, 1957-1963.” South Atlantic Quarterly 80(Spring 1981), 177-94. (P.P.6338)

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------------ To Redeem the Soul of America: the Southern ChristianLeadership Conference and Martin Luther King, Jr. Athens:University of Georgia Press, 1987, 504pp. (YA.1993.b.7727)

GARROW, DAVID J. Bearing the Cross: Martin Luther King, Jr.,and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. London: Cape,1986, 800pp. (YC.1989.a.263)

------------ . Protest at Selma, Martin Luther King, Jr. and the VotingRights Act of 1965. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1978, 346pp.(X.800/27352)

GOOD, PAUL. “‘No Man Can Fill Dr. King’s Shoes’ but AbernathyTries.” New York Times Magazine, 26 May 1968. (BLNL)

LONG, MARGARET. “The Unity of the Rifting Negro Movement.”Progressive, February 1964, pp.10-14. (P.P.7599.baa)

McFADDEN, GRACE JORDAN. “Septima P. Clark and the Strugglefor Human Rights.” In Women in the Civil Rights Movement, editedby Vicki L. Crawford, Jacqueline Anne Rouse, and Barbara Woods,pp.85-97. Brooklyn, NY: Carlson Publishing, 1990.(YA.1992.b.4526)

ORANGE, JAMES. “With the People.” Southern Exposure 9(Spring 1981): 110-16. (P.701/1584)

PAYNE, CHARLES. “Ella Baker and Models of Social Change.”Signs 14, no. 4 (1989): 885-99. (P.521/9035)

PEAKE, THOMAS R. Keeping the Dream Alive: a History of theSouthern Christian Leadership Conference from King to the 1980s.New York: Peter Lang Publishing, 1987, 502pp. (YA.1991.a.24828)

REAGIN, EWELL. “A Study of the Southern Christian LeadershipConference.” Review of Religious Research 9 (Winter 1968): 88-96.(DSC: 7794.195000)

RUSTIN, BAYARD. “Even in the Face of Death.” Liberation 2(February 1957): 12-14. (DSC: 5186.680000)

WIGGINTON, ELLIOT and SUE THRASHER. “To Make the Worldwe Want: an Interview with Dorothy Cotton.” Southern Exposure 10(September 1982): 25-31. (P.701/1584)

CORE

BELL, INGE POWELL. “Status Discrepancy and the RadicalRejection of Nonviolence.” Sociological Inquiry 38 (1968): 51-63.(DSC: 8319.625000)

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CLARK, KENNETH B. “The Civil Rights Movement: Momentumand Organization.” Daedalus, 95, no. 1 (1966): 239-67. (Ac.1730/2)

FARMER, JAMES. Lay Bare the Heart: an Autobiography of theCivil Rights Movement. New York: Arbor House, 1985, 370pp.(DSC: 85/11379)

JONES, MACK H. and ALEX WILLINGHAM. “The WhiteCustodians of the Black Experience: a Reply to Meier and Rudwick.”Social Science Quarterly 51 (June 1970): 31-36. (Ac.9234/rx)

MABEE, CARLETON. “Two Decades of Sit-ins: Evolution of Non-Violence. The Nation, 12 August, 1961, pp.78-81. (BLNL)

MAHONEY, WILLIAM. “In Pursuit of Freedom.” Liberation 6(September 1961): 7-11. (DSC: 5186.680000)

MEIER, AUGUST. “Negro Protest Movements and Organizations.”Journal of Negro Education 32 (Fall 1963): 437-450. (P.P.8003.og)

------------ and ELLIOT RUDWICK. CORE: a Study in the CivilRights Movement, 1942-1968. New York: Oxford University Press,1973, 563pp. (X.510/15228)

------------ “The First Freedom Ride.” Phylon 30 (1969): 213-22.(Ac.2685.b/2)

------------ “How CORE Began.” Social Science Quarterly 49 (March1969):789-99. (Ac.9234.rx)

MOODY, ANNE. Coming of Age in Mississippi. London: PeterOwen, 1968, 348pp. (X.809/19144)

PINARD, MAURICE, JEROME KIRK and DONALD VONESCHEN. “Processes of Recruitment in the Sit-In Movement.”Public Opinion Quarterly 33 (Fall 1969): 355-69. (P.P.6392.eck)

RICH, MARVIN. “The Congress of Racial Equality and itsStrategy.” Annals of the American Academy of Political and SocialScience 357 (1965): 113-18. (Ac.2383)

ROGERS, KIM LACY. “Organizational Experience and PersonalNarrative: Stories of New Orleans’ Civil Rights Leadership.” OralHistory Review 13 (1985): 23-54. (P.701/771)

ROLLINS, JUDITH. “Housing Civil Rights Workers: the Narrative ofOdette Harper Hines.” Journal of Women’s History 5, no. 2 (1993):132-53. (ZA.9.a.6710)

RUDWICK, ELLIOT and AUGUST MEIER. “Integration vs.Separatism: the NAACP and CORE Face Challenge from Within.” InAlong the Color Line, edited by August Meier and Elliott Rudwick,pp.238-64. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1976. (X.520/11996)

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------------ “NAACP and CORE: Some Additional TheoreticalConsiderations.” Social Science Quarterly 51 (June 1970): 37-41.(Ac.9234.rx)

------------ “Organizational Structure and Goal Succession: aComparative Analysis of the NAACP and CORE.” Social ScienceQuarterly 51 (June 1970): 9-24. (Ac.9234.rx)

YANCEY, WILLIAM L. “Organizational Structures andEnvironments: a Second Look at the NAACP and CORE.” SocialScience Quarterly 51 (June 1970): 25-30. (Ac.9234.rx)

NAACP

ARNOLD, MARTIN. “There Is No Rest for Roy Wilkins.” NewYork Times Magazine, 28 September 1969. (BLNL)

BLAND, RENDALL W. Private Pressure and Public Law: the LegalCareer of Justice Thurgood Marshall. Port Washington, NY;London: Kennikat Press, 1973, 206pp. (X.200/8316)

CLARK, KENNETH B. “The Civil Rights Movement: Momentumand Organization.” Daedalus 95, no. 1 (1966): 239-67. (Ac.1730/2)

GRAVES, CARL R. “The Right to be Served: Oklahoma City’sLunch Counter Sit-Ins, 1958-1964.” Chronicles of Oklahoma 59(Summer 1981): 361-73. (Ac.8484)

JONES, MACK H. and ALEX WILLINGHAM. “The WhiteCustodians of the Black Experience: a Reply to Meier and Rudwick.”Social Science Quarterly 51 (June 1970): 31-36. (Ac.9234.rx)

KLUGER, RICHARD. Simple Justice: the History of Brown v. Boardof Education and Black America’s Struggle for Equality. New York;London: Deutsch, 1977, 823pp. (X.200/30994)

LONG, MARGARET. “The Unity of the Rifting Negro Movement.”Progressive, February 1964, pp.10-14. (P.P.7599.baa)

McNEIL, GENNA RAE. Groundwork: Charles Hamilton Houstonand the Struggle for Civil Rights. Philadelphia: University ofPennsylvania Press, 1983, 308pp. (X.800/36676)

MARGER, MARTIN N. “Social Movement Organization andResponse to Environmental Change: the NAACP, 1960-1973.” SocialProblems 32, no. 1 (1984): 16-32. (P.521/945)

MEIER, AUGUST. “Negro Protest Movements Organizations.”Journal of Negro Education 32 (Fall 1963): 437-50. (P.P.8003.og)

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------------ “The Revolution against the NAACP.” Journal of NegroEducation 32 (Spring 1963): 146-52. (P.P.8003.og)

MORSELL, JOHN A. “The National Association for theAdvancement of Colored People and Its Strategy.” Annals of theAmerican Academy of Political and Social Science 357 (1965): 97-101. (Ac.2383)

OVINGTON, MARY WHITE. Black and White Sat Down Together:the Reminiscences of an NAACP Founder. New York: Feminist Pressat the City University of New York, 1995. (YA.1996.a.2886)

PAYNE, CHARLES. “Ella Baker and Models of Social Change.”Signs 14, no. 4 (1989): 885-99. (P.521/2035)

RENDER, SYLIVIA LYONS. “Roy Wilkins, 1901-1981: a Tribute.”Quarterly Journal of the Library of Congress 39, no. 2 (1982): 116-25. (OIOC)

ROGERS, KIM LACY. “Organizational Experience and PersoanlNarrative: Stories of New Orleans’ Civil Rights Leadership.” OralHistory Review 13 (1985): 23-54. (P.701/771)

RUDWICK, ELLIOT and AUGUST MEIER. “Integration vs.Separatism: the NAACP and CORE Face Challenge from Within.” InAlong the Color Line, edited by August Meier and Elliott Rudwick,pp.238-64. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1976. (X.520/11996)

------------ “NAACP and CORE: Some Additional TheoreticalConsiderations.” Social Science Quarterly 51 (June 1970): 37-41.(Ac.9234.rx)

------------ “Organizational Structure and Goal Succession: aComparative Analysis of the NAACP and CORE.” Social ScienceQuarterly 51 (June 1970): 9-24. (Ac.9234.rx)

SALTER, JOHN R., Jr. Jackson, Mississippi: an American Chronicleof Struggle and Schism. Hicksville, NY: 1979. (YA.1986.b.1310)

TUSHNET, MARK V. The NAACP’s Legal Strategy againstSegregated Education, 1925-1950. Chapel Hill; London: Universityof North Carolina Press, 1987, 222pp. (YC.1991.b.4992)

WATSON, DENTON L. “Reassessing the Role of the NAACP in theCivil Rights Movement.” Historian 55, no. 3 (1993): 453-68.(P.P.8004.dv)

------------ Lion in the Lobby: Clarence Mitchell, Jr’s Struggle for thePassage of the Civil Rights Laws. New York: William Morrow &Co., 1990, 846pp. (YA.1991.b.7236)

WILKINS, ROY. Standing Fast: the Autobiography of Roy Wilkins.New York: Viking, 1982, 361pp. (DSC: 82/23719)

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WILLIAMS, ROBERT F. “The Swimming Pool Showdown.”Southern Exposure 8 (Summer 1980): 22-24. (P.701/1584)

WOODS, BARBARA A. “Modjeska Simkins and the South CarolinaConference of the NAACP, 1939-1957.” In Women in the CivilRights Movement, edited by Vicki L. Crawford, Jacqueline AnneRouse, and Barbara Woods, pp.99-120. Brooklyn, NY: CarlsonPublishing, 1990. (YA.1992.b.4526)

YANCEY, WILLIAM L. “Organizational Structures andEnvironments: a Second Look at the NAACP and CORE.” SocialScience Quarterly 51 (June 1970): 25-30. (YC.1990.b.6865)

NATIONAL URBAN LEAGUE

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CLARK, KENNETH B. “The Civil Rights Movement, Momentumand Organization.” Daedalus 95, no. 1 (1966): 239-67. (Ac.1730/2)

WEISS, NANCY J. Whitney M. Young, Jr. and the Struggle for CivilRights. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1989, 286pp.(YC.1990.b.6865)

------------ “Whitney M. Young, Jr.: Committing the Power Structureto the Cause of Civil Rights.” In Black Leaders of the TwentiethCentury, edited by John Hope Franklin and August Meier, pp.331-58.Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1982. (X.529/71893)

YOUNG, WHITNEY M., Jr. “The Urban League and Its Strategy.”Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 357(1965): 102-107. (Ac.2383)

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PARTICIPANTS IN THE MOVEMENT

STUDENTS/YOUTHS

COLES, ROBERT. “Serpents and Doves: Non-violent Youth in theSouth.” In Youth: Change and Challenge, edited by Erik J. Erikson,pp.188-216. New York: Basic Books, 1963. (8418.p.12)

---------- and JOSEPH BRENNER. “American Youth in a SocialStruggle: the Mississippi Summer Project. American Journal ofOrthopsychiatry 35 (October 1965): 907-26. (P.P.8004.fe)

FENDRICH, JAMES M. “Activists Ten Years Later: a Test ofGenerational Unit Continuity.” Journal of Social Issues 30 (1974):95-118. (P.P.8003.wg)

---------- “Black and Whilte Activists Ten Years Later: PoliticalSocialization and Adult Left-Wing Politics.” Youth & Society 8, no. 1(1976): 81-104. (P.521/859)

---------- “Keeping the Faith or Pursuing the Good Life: a Study of theConsequences of Participation in the Civil Rights Movement.”American Sociological Review 42, no. 1 (1977): 144-57. (Ac.2285/2)

---------- and ELLIS S. KRAUSS. “Student Activism and Adult Left-Wing Politics: a Causal Model of Political Socialization for Black,White, and Japanese Students of the 1960s Generation.” In Researchin Social Movements, Conflict and Change, edited by LewisKriesberg, vol. 1, pp.231-55. Greenwich, CT: JAI Press, 1978.(P.521/3594)

---------- and KENNETH M. LOVOY. “Back to the Future: AdultPolitcial Behaviour of Former Student Activists.” AmericanSociological Review 52 (December 1988): 780-84. (Ac.2285/2)

---------- and ALLISON T. TARLEAU. “Marching to a DifferentDrummer: Occupational and Political Correlates of Former StudentActivists.” Social Forces 53 (December 1973): 245-52. (P.P.8001.fc)

FISHMAN, JACOB R. and FREDERIC SOLOMON. “Youth andSocial Action: Perspectives on the Student Sit-In Movement.”American Journal of Orthopsychiatry 33 (1963): 872-82.(P.P.8004.fe)

McKNIGHT, GERALD D. “A Harvest of Hate: the FBI’s Waragainst Black Youth: Domestic Intelligence in Memphis, Tennessee.”South Atlantic Quarterly 86 (Winter 1987): 1-21. (P.P.6338)

ORBELL, JOHN M. “Protest Participation among Southern NegroCollege Students.” American Political Science Review 61 (June1967): 446-56. (Ac.2380/2)

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ORUM, ANTHONY M. and AMY W. ORUM. “The Class andStatus Bases of Negro Student Protest.” Social Science Quarterly 49,no. 3 (1968): 521-33. (Ac.9234.ry)

SEARLES, RUTH and J. ALLEN WILLIAMS, Jr. “Negro CollegeStudents: Participation in Sit-ins.” Social Forces 40 (March 1962):215-20. (P.P.8001.fc)

SMITH, CHARLES U. “The Sit-ins and the New Negro Student.”Journal of Intergroup Relations 2 (1961): 223-29. (DSC:5007.548500)

SOLOMON, FREDERIC and JACOB R. FISHMAN. “Youth andSocial Action: II. Action Identity Formation in the First Student Sit-inDemonstration.” Journal of Social Issues 29, no. 2 (1964): 36-47.(P.P.8003.wg)

YOUTH of the RURAL ORGANIZING and CULTURAL CENTER.Minds Stayed on Freedom: the Civil Rights Struggle in the RuralSouth. Edited by Jay MacLeod. Boulder: Westview Press, 1991,189pp. (YC.1994.b.3193)

WHITES IN THE MOVEMENT

BLUMBERG, RHODA L. “White Mothers in the American CivilRights Movement.” In Research in the Interweave of Social Roles:Women and Men, edited by Helena A. Lopata, vol. 1, pp.33-50.Greenwich, CT: JAI Press, 1980. (P.521/3611)

CHAPPELL, DAVID L. Inside Agitators: White Southerners in theCivil Rights Movement. Baltimore; London: Johns HopkinsUniversity Press, 1994. (YC.1994.b.5512)

DEMERATH, N. J., III, GERALD MARWELL and MICHAEL T.AIKEN. “Criteria and Contingencies of Success in a Radical PoliticalMovement.” Journal of Social Issues 27, no. 1 (1971): 63-80.(P.P.8003.wg)

---------- Dynamics of Idealism: White Activists in a Black Movement.San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1971, 228pp. (X.800/6687)

McADAM, DOUG. Freedom Summer. New York, OxfordUniversity Press, 1988, 322pp. (YH.1990.b.55)

---------- “Recruitment to High Risk Activism: the Case of FreedomSummer.” American Journal of Sociology 92, no. 1 (1986): 64-90.(Ac.2691.d.12)

---------- and ROBERTO M. FERNANDEZ. “Microstructural Basesof Recruitment to Social Movements.” In Research in SocialMovements, Conflicts and Change, edited by Louis Kriesberg, vol.12, pp.1-33. Greenwich, CT: JAI Press, 1990. (P.521/3594)

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MARWELL, GERALD, MICHAEL T. AIKEN and N. J.DEMERATH III. “The Persistence of Political Attitudes Among1960’s Civil Rights Activists.” Public Opinion Quarterly 51 (1987):359-75. (P.P.6392.eck)

MARX, GARY T. and MICHAEL USEEM. “Majority Involvementin Minority Movements: Civil Rights, Abolition, Untouchability.”Journal of Social Issues 27, no. 1 (1971): 81-104. (P.P.8003.wg)

POUSSAINT, ALVIN F. “The Stresses of the White Female Workerin the Civil Rights Movement in the South.” American Journal ofPsychiatry 123, no. 4 (1966): 401-7. (SRIS)

ROTHSCHILD, MARY AICKIN. A Case of Black and White:Northern Volunteers and the Southern Freedom Summers, 1964-1965.Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1982, 213pp. (X.809/56715)

------------ “White Women Volunteers in the Freedom Summers: theirLife and Work in a Movement for Social Change.” Feminist Studies5, no. 3 (1979): 466-95. (ZA.9.a.5486)

WOMEN IN THE MOVEMENT

BLUMBERG, RHODA L. “Careers of Women Civil RightsActivists.” Journal of Sociology and social Welfare 7 (1980): 708-29.(DSC: 8319.676000)

--------- “Rediscovering Women Leaders of the Civil RightsMovement. In Dream and Reality: the Modern Black Struggle forFreedom and Equality, edited by Jeannine Swift, pp.19-28. Westport,CT: Greenwood Press, 1991. (YC.1992.b.3356)

--------- “White Mothers in the American Civil Rights Movement. InResearch in the Interweave of Social Roles: Women and Men, editedby Helena A. Lopata, vol.1, pp.33-50. Greenwich, CT: JAI Press,1980. (P.521/3611)

------------ “Women in the Civil Rights Movement: Reform orRevolution.” Dialectical Anthropology 15 (1990): 133-39. (DSC:3579.704000)

BRAMLETT-SOLOMON, SHARON. “Civil Rights Vanguard in theDeep South: Newspaper Portrayal of Fannie Lou Hamer, 1964-1977.”Journalism Quarterly 68, no. 3 (1991): 515-21. (P.P.5264.p.)

BRAUKMAN, STACY. “Women and the Civil Rights Movement inTampa: an Interview with Ellen H. Green.” Tampa Bay History 14,no. 2 (1992): 62-69. (X.0800/1792)

BROCK, ANNETTE K. “Gloria Richardson and the CambridgeMovement.” In Women in the Civil Rights Movement, edited by Vicki

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L. Crawford, Jacqueline Anne Rouse, and Barbara Woods, pp.121-44.Brooklyn, NY: Carlson Publishing, 1990. (YA.1992.b.4526)

BURKS, MARY FAIR. “Trailblazers: Women in the MontgomeryBus Boycott.” In Women in the Civil Rights Movement, edited byVicki L Crawford, Jacqueline Anne Rouse and Barbara Woods,pp.71-83. Brooklyn, NY: Carlson Publishing, 1990.(YA.1992.b.4526)

CANTAROW, ELLEN and SUSAN G. O’MALLEY. “Ella Baker:Organizing for Civil Rights.” In Moving the Mountain: WomenWorking for Social Change, edited by Ellen Cantarow, pp.52-93. OldWestbury, NY: Feminist Press, 1980. (DSC: 80/12579)

CLARK, SEPTIMA P. Ready From Within: Septima Clark and theCivil Rights Movement. Edited by Cynthia S. Brown. Navarro, CA:Wild Trees Press, 1986, 134pp. (DSC: 89/25729)

CRAWFORD, VICKI L. “Beyond the Human Self: GrassrootsActivists in the Mississippi Civil Rights Movement.” In Women inthe Civil Rights Movement, edited by Vicki L. Crawford, JacquelineAnne Rouse, and Barbara Woods, pp.13-26. Brooklyn, NY: CarlsonPublishing, 1990. (YA.1992.b.4526)

COLES, ROBERT and JOSEPH BRENNER. “American Youth in aSocial Struggle: the Mississippi Summer Project.” American Journalof Orthopsychiatry 35 (October 1965): 907-26. (DSC: 0829.250000)

----------, JACQUELINE ANNE ROUSE and BARBARA WOODS,eds. Women in the Civil Rights Movement: Trailblazers andTorchbearers, 1941-1965. Vol. 16, Black Women in United StatesHistory, edited by Darlene Clark Hine. Brooklyn, NY: CarlsonPublishing, 1990, 290pp. (YA.1992.b.4526)

DURR, VIRGINIA FOSTER. Outside the Magic Circle: theAutobiography of Virginia Foster Durr. Edited by Hollinger F.Barnard. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 1985. (DSC:87/06426)

EVANS, SARA. Personal Politics: the Roots of Women’s Liberationin the Civil Rights Movement and the New Left. New York: Alfred A.Knopf, 1979, 274pp. (X.809/51425)

---------- “Women’s Consciousness and the Southern BlackMovement.” Southern Exposure 4, no. 4 (1977): 10-18. (P.701/1584)

FLEMING, CYNTHIA GRIGGS. “Black Women Activists and theStudent Nonviolent Coordinating Committee: the Case of Ruby DorisSmith Robinson.” Journal of Women’s History 4, no. 3 (1993): 64-82.(ZA.9.a.6710)

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GIDDINGS, PAULA. When and Where I Enter: the Impact of BlackWomen on Race and Sex in America. New York: William Morrow &Co., 1984, 408pp. (YA.1989.b.2826)

GRANT, JACQUELYN. “Civil Rights Women: a Source for DoingWomanist Theology.” In Women in the Civil Rights Movement,edited by Vicki Crawford, Jacqueline Anne Rouse, and BarbaraWoods, pp.39-50. Brooklyn, NY: Carlson Publishing, 1990.(YA.1992.b.4526)

KING, MARY. Freedom Song: a Personal Story of the 1960’s CivilRights Movement. New York: William Morrow & Co., 1987, 592pp.(YA.1989.b.6472)

KLING, SUSAN. “Fannie Lou Hamer: Baptism by Fire.” InReweaving the Web of Life, edited by Pam McAllister. Philadelphia:New Society Publishers, 1982, 106-11pp. (DSC: 83/19550)

LANGSTON, DONNA. “The Women of Highlander.” In Women inthe Civil Rights Movement, edited by Vicki L. Crawford, JacquelineAnne Rouse, and Barbara Woods. Brooklyn, NY: Carlson Publishing,1990, 145-67pp. (YA.1992.b.4526)

LOCKE, MAMIE E. “This America? Fannie Lou Hamer and theMississippi Freedom Democratic Party.” In Women in the Civil RightsMovement, edited by Vicki L. Crawford, Jacqueline Anne Rouse, andBarbara Woods, pp.27-37. Brooklyn, NY: Carlson Publishing, 1990.(YA.1992.b.4526)

McFADDEN, GRACE JORDAN. “Septima P. Clark and the Strugglefor Human Rights.” In Women in the Civil Rights Movement, editedby Vicki L. Crawford, Jacqueline Anne Rouse, and Barbara Woods,pp.85-97. Brooklyn, NY: Carlson Publishing, 1990.(YA.1992.b.4526)

MOODY, ANNE. Coming of Age in Mississippi. New York: DellPublishing Co., 1968, 348pp. (X.809/19144)

MUELLER, CAROL. “Ella Baker and the Origins of ParticipatoryDemocracy.” In Women in the Civil Rights Movement, edited byVicki L. Crawford, Jacqueline Anne Rouse, and Barnara Woods,pp.51-70. Brooklyn, NY: Carlson Publishing, 1990.(YA.1992.b.4526)

MYRICK-HARRIS, CLARISSA. “Behind the Scenes: Doris Derby,Denise Nicholas and the Free Southern Theatre.” In Women in theCivil Rights Movement, edited by Vicki L. Crawford, Jacqueline AnneRouse, and Barbara Woods, pp.219-32. Brooklyn, NY: CarlsonPublishing, 1990. (YA.1992.b.4526)

O’DELL, JACK H. “Life in Mississippi: an Interview with FannieLou Hamer.” Freedomways 5, no. 2 (1965): 231-42. (DSC:4033.362000)

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OLDENDORF, SANDRA B. “The South Carolina Sea IslandsCitizenship Schools, 1957-1961.” In Women in the Civil RightsMovement, edited by Vicki L. Crawford, Jacqueline Anne Rouse, andBarbara Woods, pp.169-82. Brooklyn, NY: Carlson Publishing, 1990.(YA.1992.b.4526)

PAYNE, CHARLES. “Ella Baker and Models of Social Change.”Signs 14, no. 4 (1989): 885-99. (P.521/2035)

---------- “Men Led, but Women Organized: Movement Participationof Women in the Mississippi Delta.” In Women in the Civil RightsMovement, edited by Vicki L. Crawford, Jacqueline Anne Rouse, andBarbara Woods, pp.1-11. Brooklyn, NY: Carlson Publishing, 1990.(YA.1992.b.4526)

POUSSAINT, ALVIN F. “The Stresses of the White Female Workerin the Civil Rights Movement in the South.” American Journal ofPsychiatry 123, no. 4 (1966): 401-407. (SRIS)

ROBINSON, JO ANN GIBSON. The Montgomery Bus Boycott andthe Women Who Started It: the Memoir of Jo Ann Gibson Robinson.Edited by David J. Garrow. Knoxville: University of TennesseePress, 1987, 190pp. (YH.1989.a.623)

ROMAINE, ANNE. “Interview with Fannie Lou Hamer.” SouthernExposure (Spring 1981): 47-48. (P.701/1584)

ROTHSCHILD, MARY AICKIN. “White Women Volunteers in theFreedom Summers: their Life and Work in a Movement for socialChange.” Feminist Studies 5, no. 3 (1979): 466-95. (DSC:3905.197700)

STANDLEY, ANNE. “The Role of Black Women in the Civil RightsMovement.” In Women in the Civil Rights Movment, edited by VickiL. Crawford, Jacqueline Anne Rouse, and Barbara Woods, pp.183-202. Brooklyn, NY: Carlson Publishing, 1990. (YA.1992.b.4526)

WASHINGTON, CYNTHIA. “We Started from Different Ends ofthe Spectrum.” Southern Exposure 4, no. 4 (1977): 14-15.(P.701/1584)

WEBB, SHEYANN. Selma, Lord, Selma: Girlhood Memories of theCivil Rights Days. University of Alabama Press, 1980.(X.950/32044)

WOODS, BARBARA A. “Modjeska Simkins and the South CarolinaConference of the NAACP, 1939-1957.” In Women in the CivilRights Movement, edited by Vicki L. Craford, Jacqueline AnneRouse, and Barbara Woods, pp.99-120. Brooklyn, NY: CarlsonPublishing, 1990. (YA.1992.b.4526)

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BIOGRAPHIES AND AUTOBIOGRAPHIES

ABERNATHY, RALPH DAVID. And the Walls Came TumblingDown. New York: Harper & Row, 1989, 641pp. (DSC: 90/22729)

ALVIS, JOEL L. “Racial Turmoil and Religious Reaction: the Rt.Rev. John M. Allin.” Historical Magazine of the ProtestantEpiscopal Church 50 (March 1981): 83-96. (P.P.851.f)

ARNOLD, MARTIN. “There Is No Rest for Roy Wilkins.” NewYork Times Magazine, 28 September 1969. (BLNL)

ASHMORE, HARRY S. Civil Rights and Wrongs: a Memoir of Raceand Politics, 1944-1994. New York: Pantheon Books, 1994.(YA.1995.b.7417)

BASS, JACK. The Life and Times of Judge Frank M. Johnson, Jr.,and the South’s Fight over Civil Rights. New York: Doubleday, 1993.(YA.1993.b.6199)

BEARDSLEE, WILLIAM R. The Way Out Must Lead In: LifeHistories in the Civil Rights Movement. 2nd ed. Westport, CT:Lawrence Hill Books, 1983, 193pp. (DSC: 84/12020)

BELFRAGE, SALLY. Freedom Summer. New York: Viking, 1965,246pp. (X.809/2064)

BLAND, RENDALL W. Private Pressure and Public Law: the LegalCareer of Justice Thurgood Marshall. Port Washington, NY:Kennikat Press, 1973, 206pp. (X.260/8316)

BOND, JULIAN. “The Movement Then and Now.” SouthernExposure 3 (1976): 5-16. (P.701/1584)

BRADEN, ANNE. “Birmingham, 1956-1979: the History that WeMade.” Southern Exposure 8 (Summer 1979): 48-54. (P.701/1584)

BROCK, ANNETTE K. “Gloria Richardson and the CambridgeMovement.” In Women in the Civil Rights Movement, edited by VickiL. Crawford, Jacqueline Anne Rouse, and Barbara Woods, pp.121-44.Brooklyn, NY: Carlson Publishing, 1990. (YA.1992.b.4526)

BROOKS, THOMAS R. “A Strategist without a Movement.” NewYork Times Magazine, 16 February 1969. (BLNL)

BROWN, CYNTHIA S. “Rosa Parks.” Southern Exposure 9 (Spring1981): 16-17. (X.809/13720)

CANTAROW, ELLEN and SUSAN G. O’MALLEY. “Ella Baker:Organizing for Civil Rights.” In Moving the Mountain: WomenWorking for Social Change, edited by Ellen Cantarow, pp.52-93. OldWestbury, NY: Feminist Press, 1980. (DSC: 80/12579)

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CHESTNUT, J. L. and JULIA CASS. Black in Selma: theUncommon Life of J. L. Chestnut, Jr. New York: Farrar, Straus &Giroux, 1990, 432pp. (YA.1993.b.4848)

CLARK, SEPTIMA P. Ready From Within: Septima Clark and theCivil Rights Movement. Edited by Cynthia S. Brown. Navarro, CA:Wilt Trees Press, 1986, 134pp. (DSC: 89/25729)

CLUSTER, DICK. “The Borning Struggle: an Interview with BerniceJohnson Reagon.” Radical America 12 (November/December 1978):8-25. (P.701/827)

COHEN, ROBERT CARL. Black Crusader: a Biography of RobertFranklin Williams: Secaucus, NJ: Lyle Stuart, 1972, 361pp. (DSC:4965.920000)

COTTON, DOROTHY. “A Conversation with Ralph Abernathy.”Journal of Current Social Issues 9, no. 3 (1970): 21-30. (DSC:4965.920000)

CUMMINGS, RICHARD. The Pied Piper: Allard K. Lowenstein andthe Liberal Dream. New York: Grove Press, 1985, 569pp. (DSC:85/13596)

DEMUTH, JERRY. “Sick and Tired of Being Sick and Tired.” TheNation, 1 June 1964, 548-51. (P.P.6392.e)

DENT, RICHARD BLAKE. “The Father His Children Forgot.”American History Illustrated 20 (1985): 10-17. (DSC:0818.600000.n)

DENT, TOM. “Interviews with Civil Rights Activists.”Freedomways 18, no. 3 (1978): 164-69. (DSC: 4033.362000)

DURR, VIRGINIA FOSTER. Outside the Magic Circle: theAutobiography of Virginia Foster Durr. Edited by Hollinger F.Barnard. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 1985, 360pp.(DSC: 87/06426)

FARMER, JAMES. Lay Bare the Heart: an Autobiography of theCivil Rights Movement. New York: Arbor House, 1985, 370pp.(DSC: 85/11379)

GARDNER, TOM. “The Montgomery Bus Boycott: Interviews withRosa Parks, E. D. Nixon, Johnny Carr, and Virginia Durr.” SouthernExposure 9, no. 1 (1981): 13-21. (P.701/1584)

GARROW, DAVID J. Bearing the Cross: Martin Luther King, Jr.,and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. New York:Random House, 1986, 800pp. (YC.1989.a.263)

GOOD, PAUL. “No Man Can Fill Dr. King’s Shoes but AbernathyTries.” New York Times Magazine, 26 May 1968. (BLNL)

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---------- “Odyssey of a Man and a Movement.” New York TimesMagazine, 25 June 1967. (BLNL)

---------- The Trouble I’ve Seen: White Journalist/Black Movement.Washington, DC: Howard University Press, 1975, 272pp.(X.800/26003)

GRANT, JACQUELYN. “Civil Rights Women: a Source for DoingWomanist Theology.” In Women in the Civil Rights Movement,edited by Vicki Crawford, Jacqueline Anne Rouse, and BarbaraWoods, pp.39-50. Brooklyn, NY: Carlson Publishing, 1990.(YA.1992.b.4526)

GUTHMAN, EDWIN O., and JEFFREY SHULMAN, eds. RobertKennedy in His Own Words: the Unpublished Recollections of theKennedy Years. New York: Bantam Books, 1988, 493pp.(YC.1989.b.2182)

HAMPTON, HENRY, STEVE FAGER and SARAH FLYNN.Voices of Freedom: an Oral History of the Civil Rights Movementfrom the 1950s Through the 1980s. New York: Bantam Books, 1990,692pp. (YA.1994.a.11357)

HARRIS, DAVID. Dreams Die Hard: Three Men’s Journey Throughthe Sixties. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1982, 341pp. (DSC:82/14333)

HUEY, GARY. Rebel with a Cause: P. D. East, Southern Liberalism,and the Civil Rights Movement, 1953-1971. Wilmington, DE:Scholarly Resources, 1985, 232pp. (DSC: 86/07140)

JONES, LEWIS W. “Fred L. Shuttlesworth, Indigenous Leader.” InBirmingham, edited by David J. Garrow, pp.115-50. Brooklyn, NY:Carlson Publishing, 1989. (YA.1991.b.8355)

KING, MARY. Freedom Song: a Personal Story of the 1960’s CivilRights Movement. New York: William Morrow & Co., 1987, 502pp.(YA.1989.b.6472)

KLING, SUSAN. “Fannie Lou Hamer: Baptism by Fire.” InReweaving the Web of Life, edited by Pam McAllister, pp.106-111.Philadelphia: New Society Publishers, 1982. (DSC: 83/19550)

LIPSITZ, GEORGE. A Life in the Struggle: Ivory Perry and theCulture of Opposition. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1988,292pp. (YA.1990.b.4869)

LOCKE, MAMIE E. “Is This America? Fannie Lou Hamer and theMississippi Freedom Democratic Party.” In Women in the CivilRights Movement, edited by Vicki L. Crawford, Jacqueline AnneRouse, and Barbara Woods, pp.27-37. Brooklyn, NY: CarlsonPublishing, 1990. (YA.1993.b.4526)

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LONGENECKER, STEPHEN L. Selma’s Peacemaker: RalphSmeltzer and Civil Rights Mediation. Philadelphia: TempleUniversity Press, 1987, 273pp. (YA.1990.a.10152)

LYON, DANNY. Memories of the Southern Civil Rights Movement.Chapel Hill; London: Published for the Center for DocumentaryStudies, Duke University, by the University of North Carolina Press,1992. (LB.31.c.7355)

MARS, FLORENCE. Witness in Philadelphia. Baton Rouge:Louisiana State University Press, 1977, 296pp. (X.809/64273)

MEREDITH, JAMES. Three Years in Mississippi. Bloomington:University of Indiana Press, 1966, 328pp. (X.800/1704)

MOODY, ANNE. Coming of Age in Mississippi. New York: DellPublishing Co., 1968, 348pp. (X.809/19144)

MORRISON, JOAN and ROBERT K. MORRISON. From Camelotto Kent State: the Sixties Experience in the Words of Those who Livedit. New York: Times Books, 1987, 355pp. (YA.1990.b.496)

MOSES, BOB. “Mississippi: 1961-1962.” Liberation 14 (January1970): 7-17. (DSC: 5186.680000)

MUELLER, CAROL. “Ella Baker and the Origins of ‘ParticipatoryDemocracy.’” In Women in the Civil Rights Movement, edited byVicki L. Crawford, Jacqueline Anne Rouse, and Barbara Woods,pp.51-70. Brooklyn, NY: Carlson Publishing, 1990.(YA.1992.b.4526)

O’DELL, JACK H. “Life in Mississippi: an Interview with FannieLou Hamer.” Freedomways 5, no. 2 (1965): 231-42.(YA.1992.b.4526)

ORANGE, JAMES. “With the People.” Southern Exposure 9(Spring 1981): 110-16. (P.701/1584)

PAYNE, CHARLES. “Ella Baker and Models of Social Change.”Signs 14, no. 4 (1989): 885-99. (P.521/2035)

PENDERGRAST, NAN. “Twenty-five Years of Love in Action: anInterview with Joseph Lowery.” Fellowship 1 (February 1983): 10-12. (DSC: 3905/130000)

PFISTER, JOE. “Twenty Years and Still Marching.” SouthernExposure 10 (January 1982): 20-27. (P.701/1584)

RAINES, HOWELL, ed. My Soul Is Rested: Movement Days in theDeep South Remembered. New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1977,472pp. (X.200/19050)

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REAGON, BERNICE JOHNSON. “Women as Culture Carriers inthe Civil Rights Movement: Fannie Lou Hamer.” In Women in theCivil Rights Movement, edited by Vicki L. Crawford, Jacqueline AnneRouse, and Barbara Woods, pp.203-217. Brooklyn, NY: CarlsonPublishing, 1990. (YA.1992.b.4526)

RENDER, SYLVIA LYONS. “Roy Wilkins, 1901-1981: a Tribute.”The Quarterly Journal of the Library of Congress 39, no. 2 (1982):116-25. (A/S.284/3)

ROBINSON, JO ANN GIBSON. The Montgomery Bus Boycott andthe Women Who Started It: the Memoir of Jo Ann Gibson Robinson.Edited by Davide J. Garrow. Knoxville: University of TennesseePress, 1987, 190pp. (YH.1989.a.623)

ROGERS, KIM LACY. “Oral History and the History of the CivilRights Movement.” Journal of American History 75 (1988): 567-76.(Ac.8408/2)

------------ “Organizational Experience and Personal Narrative: Storiesof New Orleans’ Civil Rights Leadership.” Oral History Review 13(1985): 23-54. (P.701/771)

------------- Righteous Lives: Narratives of the New Orleans CivilRights Movement. New York; London: New York University Press,1993. (YC.1994.b.17)

ROMAINE, ANNE. “Interview with Fannie Lou Hamer.” SouthernExposure (Spring 1981): 47-48. (P.701-1584)

RUGABER, WALTER. “We Can’t Cuss White People Any More,it’s in Our Hands Now.” New York Times Magazine, 4 August 1968.(BLNL)

SELBY, EARL and MIRIAN SELBY. Odyssey: Journey ThroughBlack America. New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1971, 381pp.(X.809/15919)

SESSIONS, JIM and SUE THRASHER. “A New Day Begins: anInterview with John Lewis.” Southern Exposure 4 (Fall 1976): 14-24.(P.701/1584)

SINSHEIMER, JOSEPH A. “Never Turn Back: an Interview withSam Block.” Southern Exposure 15 (Summer 1987): 37-50.(P.701/1584)

THELWELL, MICHAEL. “Fish are Jumping an’ the Cotton is High:Notes from the Mississippi Delta.” Massachusetts Review 7, no. 2(1966): 362-74. (P.P.7615.hd)

VIORST, MILTON. Fire in the Streets: America in the 1960s. NewYork: Simon & Schuster, 1979, 591pp. (X.520/32693)

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WARREN, ROBERT PENN. “Two for SNCC.” Commentary 39(1965): 38-48. (P.P.15.abc)

WATSON, DENTON L. Lion in the Lobby: Clarence Mitchell, Jr.’sStruggle for the Passage of the Civil Rights Laws. New York:William Morrow & Co., 1990, 846pp. (YA.1991.b.7236)

WEBB, SHEYANN and RACHEL WEST NELSON. Selma, Lord,Selma: Girlhood Memories of the Civil Rights Days. Tuscaloosa:University of Alabama Press, 1980, 146pp. (X.950/32044)

WEISS, NANCY J. Whitney M. Young, Jr., and the Struggle for CivilRights. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1989, 286pp.(YC.1990.b.6865)

---------- “Whitney M. Young, Jr.: Committing the Power Structure tothe Cause of Civil Rights.” In Black Leaders of the TwentiethCentury, edited by John Hope Franklin and August Meier, pp.331-58.Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1982. (X.529/71893)

WEXLER, SANFORD. The Civil Rights Movement: an EyewitnessHistory. New York: Facts on File, 1993. (YC.1994.b.4060)

WIGGINTON, ELLIOT and SUE THRASHER. “To Make the WorldWe Want: an Interview with Dorothy Cotton.” Southern Exposure 10(September 1982): 25-31. (P.701/1584)

WILKINS, ROY. Standing Fast: the Autobiography of Roy Wilkins.New York: Viking, 1982, 361pp. (DSC: 82/23719)

WOODS, BARBARA A. “Modjeska Simkins and the South CarolinaConference of the NAACP, 1939-1957.” In Women in the CivilRights Movement, edited by Vicki L. Crawford, Jacqueline AnneRouse, and Barbara Woods, pp.99-120. Brooklyn, NY: CarlsonPublishing, 1990. (YA.1992.b.4526)

YARBROUGH, TINSLEY E. Judge Frank Johnson and HumanRights in Alabama. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 1981,270pp. (YA.1986.b.3293)

---------- A Passion for Justice: J. Waties Waring and Civil Rights.New York: Oxford University Press, 1987, 282pp. (YC.1988.b.5012)

YOUTH OF THE RURAL ORGANIZING and CULTURALCENTER. Minds Stayed on Freedom: the Civil Rights Struggle in theRural South. Edited by Jay MacLeod. Boulder: Westview Press,1991, 189pp. (YC.1994.b.3193)

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THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT

EXECUTIVE

ANDERSON, J. W. Eisenhower, Brownell, and the Congress: theTangled Origins of the Civil Rights Bill of 1956-1957. Tuscaloosa:University of Alabama Press, 1964, 139pp. (X.700/3148)

BALL, HOWARD, DALE KRANE and THOMAS P. LANTH.Compromised Compliance: Implementation of the 1965 Voting RightsAct. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1982, 300pp. (X.529/66829)

BELKNAP, MICHAEL R. Federal Law and Southern Order: RacialViolence and Constitutional Conflict in the Post-Brown South.Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1987, 387pp. (YC.1996.a.4433)

------------ Presidential Committees and White House Conferences.New York; London: Garland, 1991. (YC.1992.b.1284)

BERMAN, WILLIAM C. The Politics of Civil Rights in the TrumanAdministration. Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 1970, 261pp.(X.809/15789)

BICKEL, ALEXANDER M. “Civil Rights: the Kennedy Record.”New Republic, 15 December 1962, pp.11-16. (BLNL)

BRAUER, CARL M. John F. Kennedy and the SecondReconstruction. New York: Columbia University Press, 1977, 396pp.(X.800/26377)

BULLOCK, CHARLES S., III and CHARLES M. LAMB, eds.Implementation of Civil Rights Policy. Monterey, CA: Brooks/ColePublishing Co., 1984, 223pp. (DSC: 83/36326)

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MAYER, MICHAEL S. “With Much Deliberation and Some Speed:Eisenhower and the Brown Decision.” Journal of Southern History 54(1986): 43-76. (Ac.8542.a)

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WOLK, ALLAN. The Presidency and Black Civil Rights:Eisenhower to Nixon. East Rutherford, NJ: Fairleigh DickinsonUniversity Press, 1971, 276pp. (X.809/15506)

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ANDERSON, J. W. Eisenhower, Brownell, and the Congress: theTangled Origins of the Civil Rights Bill of 1956-1957. Tusculoosa:University of Alabama Press, 1964, 139pp. (X.700/3148)

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KING, DONALD B. and CHARLES W. QUICK, eds. Legal Aspectsof the Civil Rights Movement. Detroit: Wayne State University Press,1965, 447pp. (X.200/2064)

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McCORD, JOHN H., ed. With All Deliberate Speed: Civil RightsTheory and Reality. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1969,205pp. (X.200/3706)

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THORNTON, J. MILLS, III. “Challenge and Response in theMontgomery Bus Boycott of 1955-1956.” The Alabama Review 33(July 1980): 163-235. (P.P.7612.og)

VALIEN, PRESTON. “The Montogomery Bus Protest as a SocialMovement.” In Race Relations, edited by Jitsuichi Masuoka andPreston Valien, pp.112-127. Chapel Hill: University of NorthCarolina Press, 1961. (X.800/1788)

WALTON, NORMAN W. “The Walking City: a History of theMontgomery Bus Boycott.” Negro History Bulletin from October1956 to January 1958. (DSC: 6075.170000)

WATTERS, PAT. “Why the Negro Children March.” New YorkTimes Magazine, 21 March 1965. (BLNL)

WEBB, SHEYANN and RACHEL WEST NELSON. Selma, Lord,Selma: Girlhood Memories of the Civil Rights Days. Tuscaloosa:University of Alabama Press, 1980, 146pp. (X.950/32044)

ARKANSAS

BLOSSOM, VIRGIL T. It has Happened here. New York: Harper &Row, 1959, 209pp. (8356.p.54)

CAMPBELL, ERNEST Q. and THOMAS F. PETTIGREW.Christians in Racial Crisis: a Study of Little Rock’s Ministry.Washington, DC. Public Affairs Press, 1959, 196pp. (4184.d.2)

---------- “Men of God in Racial Crisis.” Christian Century, 4 June1958, pp.663-65. (P.P.6392.ebd)

---------- “Racial and Moral Crisis: the Role of Little Rock Ministers.”American Journal of Sociology 64, no. 5 (1959): 509-16.(Ac.2691.d/12)

---------- “Vignettes from Little Rock.” Christianity and Crisis, 29September 1958, pp.128-36. (P.101/57)

FREYER, TONY. The Little Rock Crisis: a ConstitutionalInterpretation. Westport, CT.; London: Greenwood Press, 1984,186pp. (YC.1986.a.1278)

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HAYS, BROOKS. A Southern Moderate Speaks. Chapel Hill:University of North Carolina Press, 1959, 231pp. (X.800/29652)

HUCKABY, ELIZABETH. Crisis at Central High: Little Rock, 1957-58. Baton Rouge; London: Louisiana State University Press, 1980,222pp. (X.800/29652)

McMILLEN, NEIL R. “White Citizens’ Council and Resistance toSchool Desegregation in Arkansas.” Arkansas Historical Quarterly30 (Spring 1971): 95-122. (P.P.8004.fr)

PHILLIPS, WILLIAM M., “The Boycott: a Negro Community inConflict.” Phylon 22 (Spring 1961): 24-30. (Ac.2685.b.2)

FLORIDA

BUTTON, JAMES W. Blacks and Social Change: Impact of theCivil Rights Movement in Southern Communities. Princeton;Guildford: Princeton University Press, 1989, 326pp.(YH.1990.b.231)

COLBURN, DAVID R. Racial Change and Community Crisis: St.Augustine, Florida, 1877-1980. New York; Guildford: ColumbiaUniversity Press, 1985, 258pp. (YC.1988.b.2454)

FLORIDA LEGISLATIVE INVESTIGATION COMMITTEE.“Racial and Civil Disorders in St. Augustine.” In St. Augustine,Florida, 1963-1964: Mass Protest and Racial Violence, edited byDavid J. Garrow. Brooklyn, NY: Carlson Publishing, 1989. (DSC:95/19404)

GARROW, DAVID J., ed. St. Augustine, Florida, 1963-1964: MassProtest and Racial Violence. Brooklyn, NY: Carlson Publishing,1989, 364pp. (DSC: 95/19404)

HARTLEY, ROBERT W. “A Long Hot Summer: The St. AugustineRacial Disorders of 1964.” In St. Augustine, edited by David J.Garrow. Brooklyn, NY: Carlson Publishing, 1989. (DSC:95/19404)

HERBERS, JOHN. “Critical Test for the Nonviolent Way.” NewYork Times Magazine, 5 July 1964. (BLNL)

KALLAL, EDWARD W. “St. Augustine and the Ku Klux Klan: 1963and 1964.” In St. Augustine, edited by David J. Garrow,. Brooklyn,NY: Carlson Publishing, 1989. (DSC: 95/19404)

KILLIAN, LEWIS M. “Organization, Rationality and Spontaneity inthe Civil Rights Movement.” American Sociological Review 49(December 1984): 770-83. (Ac.2285/2)

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------------ and CHARLES M. GRIGG. Racial Crisis in America:Leadership in Conflict. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall Press,1964, 144pp. (X.809/92)

------------ and CHARLES U. SMITH. “Negro Protest Leaders in aSouthern Community.” Social Forces 38 (March 1960): 253-57.(P.P.8001.fc)

GEORGIA

ANDERSON, WILLIAM G. “The Spirit of Albany.” Labor Today 3(Winter 1962): 11-14. (DSC: 5137.935000)

CARSON, CLAYBORNE: “SNCC and the Albany Movement.”Journal of Southwest Georgia History 2 (Fall 1984): 15-25. (DSC:5066.057000n)

CLEGHORN, REESE. “Epilogue in Albany: Were the Mass MarchesWorthwhile?” New Republic, 20 July 1963, pp.15-18. (BLNL)

CLUSTER, DICK. “The Borning Struggle: an Interview with BerniceJohnson Reagon.” Radical America 12 (November/December 1978):8-25. (P.701/827)

HANKS, LAWRENCE J. The Struggle for Black PoliticalEmpowerment in Three Georgia Counties. Knoxville: University ofTennessee Press, 1987, 227pp. (DSC: 87/28668)

HARDING, VINCENT, and STAUGHTON LYND. “Albany,Georgia.” The Crisis 70 (February 1963): 69-78. (P.523/130)

HARMON, DAVID ANDREW. Beneath the Image of the CivilRights Movement and Race Relations: Atlanta, Georgia, 1946-1981.New York; London: Garland, 1996. (YC.1996.a.1916)

HUBBARD, HOWARD. “From Failure to Success: Albany toBirmingham.” Public Interest 12 (Summer 1968): 4-8. (DSC:6967.100000)

INSCOE, JOHN C. Georgia in Black and White: Explorations in theRace Relations of a Southern State, 1865-1950. Athens; London:University of Georgia Press, 1994. (YC.1996.b.5806)

KING, SLATER. “The Bloody Battleground of Albany.”Freedomways 4, no. 1 (1964): 93-101. (DSC: 4033.362000)

---------- “Our Main Battle in Albany.” Freedomways 5, no. 3 (1965):417-23. (DSC: 4033.362000)

NEWSOME, LIONEL and WILLIAM GORDEN. “A Stormy Rally inAtlanta.” Today’s Speech 11 (April 1963): 18-21. (DSC:8859.770000)

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O’BRIEN, THOMAS. “Georgia’s Response to Brown vs. Board ofEducation, 1954-1961.” Proceedings of the South CarolinaHistorical Association 1992: 55-66. (DSC: 6820.800000n)

PFISTER, JOE. “Twenty Years and Still Marching.” SouthernExposure 10 (January 1982): 20-27. (P.701/1584)

RICKS, JOHN A. “De Lawd’ Descends and Is Crucified: MartinLuther King, Jr., in Albany, Georgia.” Journal of Southwest GeorgiaHistory 2 (Fall 1984): 3-14. (DSC: 5066.057000n)

ROZIER, JOHN. Black Boss: Political Revolution in a GeorgiaCounty. Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1982, 220pp. (DSC:82/15381)

WALKER, JACK L. “The Functions of Disunity: Negro Leadershipin a Southern City.” Journal of Negro Education 32 (Summer 1963):227-36. (P.P.8003.og)

----------- “Protest and Negotiation: a Case Study of Negro Leadershipin Atlanta, Georgia.” Midwest Journal of Political Science 7 (May1963): 99-124. (DSC: 5761.445000)

WATTERS, PAT. Down to Now: Reflections on the Southern CivilRights Movement. New York: Pantheon Books, 1971, 426pp.(X.809/17591)

ZINN, HOWARD. The Southern Mystique. New York: Alfred A.Knopf, 1964, 267pp. (X.809/3519)

LOUISIANA

HARTZ, JENNIFER. “‘Simply Exercising Our Rights as Citizens’:the Desegregation of Public Transportation in Shreveport, Louisiana,1956-1972.” North Louisiana Historical Association Journal 22, no.4 (1991): 125-38

INGER, MORTON. Politics and Reality in an American City: theNew Orleans School Crisis of 1960. New York: Center for UrbanEducation, 1969, 114pp. (X.700/6624)

LIPSITZ, GEORGE. A Life In the Struggle: Ivory Perry and theCulture of Opposition. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1988,292pp. (YA.1990.b.4869)

ROGERS, KIM LACY. “Organizational Experience and PersonalNarrative: Stories of New Orleans’ Civil Rights Leadership.” OralHistory Review 13 (1985): 23-54. (P.701/771)

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------------ Righteous Lives: Narratives of the New Orleans CivilRights Movement. New York; London: New York University Press,1993, 254pp. (YC.1994.b.17)

MISSISSIPPI

ABNEY, GLENN F. “Factors Related to Negro Voter Turnout inMississippi.” Journal of Politics, 36 (November 1974): 1057-63.(P.P.6392.ecx)

ADLER, RENATA. “The Meredith Mississippi March.” New Yorker,16 July 1966, pp.21-24. (BLNL)

ALVIS, JOEL L. “Racial Turmoil and Religious Reaction: the Rt.Rev. John M. Allin.” Historical Magazine of the ProtestantEpiscopal Church 50 (March 1981): 83-96. (DSC: 4316.435000)

BELFRAGE, SALLY. Freedom Summer. London: Deutsch, 1965,246pp. (X.809/2064)

BRAMLETT-SOLOMON, SHARON. “Civil Rights Vanguard in theDeep South: Newspaper Portrayal of Fannie Lou Hamer, 1964-1977.”Journalism Quarterly 68, no. 3 (1991): 515-21. (P.P.5264.p.)

BRAVERMAN, MIRIAM. “Mississippi Summer.” Library Journal90 (15 November 1965): 5045-47. (P.P.6491.h)

BURNER, ERIC R. And Gently He Shall Lead Them: Robert ParrisMoses and Civil Rights in Mississippi. New York: New YorkUniversity Press, 1994, 224pp. (YC.1995.b.4382)

CAGIN, SETH and PHILIP DRAY. We Are Not Afraid: the Story ofGoodman, Schwernel, and Chaney and the Civil Rights Campaign forMississippi. New York: Macmillan Publishing Co., 1988, 613pp.(DSC: 89/13314)

COLBY, DAVID C. “Black Power, White Resistance, and PublicPolicy: Political Power and Poverty Program Grants in Mississippi.”Journal of Politics 47, no. 2 (1985): 579-95. (P.P.6392.ecx)

------------ “The Voting Rights Act and Black Registration inMississippi.” Publius 16 (Fall 1986): 123-37. (P.521/2322)

------------ “White Violence and the Civil Rights Movement.” InBlacks in Southern Politics, edited by Laurence W. Moreland, RobertP. Steed, and Tod A. Baker, pp.31-48. New York: Praeger Publishers,1987. (DSC: 88/03190)

COLES, ROBERT and JOSEPH BRENNER. “American Youth in aSocial Struggle: the Mississippi Summer Project.” American Journalof Orthopsychiatry 35 (October 1965): 907-26. (DSC: 0829.250000)

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CRAWFORD, VICKI L. “Beyond the Human Self: GrassrootsActivists in the Mississippi Civil Rights Movement.” In Women inthe Civil Rights Movement, edited by Vicki L. Crawford, JacquelineAnne Rouse, and Barbara Woods, pp.13-26. Brooklyn, NY: CarlsonPublishing, 1990. (YA.1992.b.4526)

------------ “Grassroots Activists in the Mississippi Civil RightsMovement.” Sage: a Scholarly Journal on Black Women 5, no. 2(1988): 24-29. (DSC: 8069.215000)

CUMMINGS, RICHARD. The Pied Piper: Allard K. Lowenstein andthe Liberal Dream. New York: Grove Press, 1985, 569pp. (DSC:85/13596)

CUNNIGEN, DONALD. “The Mississippi State Advisory Committeeto the United States Commission on Civil Rights, 1960-65.” Journalof Mississippi History 53, no. 1 (1991): 1-17. (Ac.8407/2)

DEMUTH, JERRY. “Summer in Mississippi: Freedom Moves in toStay.” The Nation, 14 September 1976, pp.104-110. (BLNL)

------------ “Sick and Tired of Being Sick and Tired.” The Nation, 1June 1964, pp.548-51. (BLNL)

DITTMER, JOHN. Local People: the Struggle for Civil Rights inMississippi. (Blacks in the New World Series.) Urbana: University ofIllinois Press, 1994, 530pp. (YA.1995.b.7903)

FINDLAY, JAMES. “In Keeping with the Prophets: the MississippiSummer of 1964.” Christian Century, 8-15 June 1988, pp.574-76.(P.P.6392.ebd)

FOSTER, E. C. “A Time of Challenge: Afro-Mississippi PoliticalDevelopments since 1965.” Journal of Negro History 68 (Spring1983): 185-200. (Ac.8444)

FRUCHTER, NORM. “Mississippi: Notes on SNCC.” Studies onthe Left (Winter 1965): 74-80. (P.P.7613.k.3)

GUYOT, LAWRENCE, and MIKE THELWELL. “TowardIndependent Political Power.” Freedomways 6, no. 3 (1966): 246-54.(DSC: 4033.362000)

HAMBLIN, ROBERT W. “The Southern Literary Festival: aMicrocosm of the Civil Rights Movement.” Journal of MississippiHistory 53, no. 2 (1991): 83-114. (Ac.8407/2)

HECK, EDWARD V. and JOSEPH STEWART, Jr. 1982. “EnsuringAccess to Justice: the Role of Interest Group Lawyers in the 60sCampaign for Civil Rights.” Judicature 66, no. 2 (1982): 84-94.(DSC: 5073.830000)

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HEINZE, FREDERICK. “The Freedom Libraries.” Library Journal90 (15 April 1965): 37-39. (P.P.6491.h)

HOLT, LEN. The Summer That Didn’t End. London: Heinemann,1966, 351pp. (X.709/2648)

HONNOLD, JOHN. “The Bourgeois Bar and the MississippiMovement.” American Bar Association Journal 52 (March 1966):228-32. (DSC: 0810.730000)

HOWE, FLORENCE. “Mississippi’s Freedom Schools: the Politicsof Education.” Harvard Educational Review 34 (Spring 1965): 144-60. (DSC: 4265.900000)

HUEY, GARY. Rebel with a Cause: P. D. East, Southern Liberalism,and the Civil Rights Movement, 1953-1971. Wilmington, DE:Scholarly Resources, 1985, 232pp. (DSC: 86/07140)

HUIE, WILLIAM BRADFORD. Three Lives for Mississippi.London: Heinemann, 1965, 254pp. (X.208/361)

JOURBERT, PAUL E. and BEN M. CROUCH. “Mississippi Blacksand the Voting Rights Act of 1965.” Journal of Negro Education 46(Spring 1977): 157-67. (P.P.8003.og)

KERNELL, SAM. “Comment: a Re-Evaluation of Black Voting inMississippi.” American Political Science Review 67, no. 4 (1973):1307-18. (Ac.2380/2)

KLING, SUSAN. “Fannie Lou Hamer: Baptism by Fire.” InReweaving the Web of Life, edited by Pam McAllister, pp.106-111.Philadelphia: New Society Publishers, 1982. (DSC: 83/19550)

LADNER JOYCE. “What ‘Black Power’ means to Negroes inMississippi.” Trans-action 5 (November 1967): 7-15. (DSC:8884.700000)

LAWRENCE, KEN. “Mississippi Spies.” Southern Exposure 9 (Fall1981): 82-86. (P.701/1584)

LOCKE, MAMIE E. “Is This America? Fannie Lou Hamer and theMississippi Freedom Democratic Party.” In Women in the CivilRights Movement, edited by Vicki L. Crawford, Jacqueline AnneRouse, and Barbara Wood, pp.27-37. Brooklyn, NY: CarlsonPublishing, 1990. (YA.1992.b.4526)

LORD, WALTER. The Past That Would Not Die. London: HamishHamilton, 1966, 275pp. (X.809/2298)

LYND, STOUGHTON. “Freedom Schools.” Freedomways 5, no. 2(1965): 302-309. (DSC: 4033.362000)

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McADAM, DOUG. Freedom Summer. New York; Oxford; OxfordUniversity Press, 1988, 322pp. (YH.1990.b.55)

------------ “Recruitment to High Risk Activism: the Case of FreedomSummer.” American Journal of Sociology 92, no. 1 (1986): 64-90.(Ac.2691.d/12)

McMILLEN, NEIL R. “Black Enfranchisement in Mississippi:Federal Enforcement and Black Protest in the 1960’s.” Journal ofSouthern History 43, no. 3 (1977): 351-72. (Ac.8542.a)

MARS, FLORENCE. Witness in Philadelphia. Baton Rouge:Louisiana State University Press, 1977, 296pp. (X.809/64273)

MEREDITH, JAMES. Three Years in Mississippi. Bloomington;London: University of Indiana Press, 1966, 328pp. (X.800/1704)

MILLER, CHAR. “The Mississippi Summer Project Remembered:the Stephen Mitchell Bingham Letter.” Journal of MississippiHistory 47, no. 4 (1985): 248-307. (Ac.8407/2)

MILLS, NICOLAUS. Like a Holy Crusade: Mississippi 1964--TheTurning Point of the Civil Rights Movement of America. Chicago: I.R.Dee, 1992, 222pp. (YA.1993.a.14834)

MOODY, ANNE. Coming of Age in Mississippi. London: PeterOwen, 1974, 348pp. (X.809/19144)

MORRISON, MINION K. C. Black Political Mobilization:Leadership, Power, and Mass Behaviour. Albany: State University ofNew York Press, 1987, 303pp. (YC.1988.b.2532)

------------ and JOE C. HUANG. “The Transfer of Power in aMississippi Town.” Growth and Change 4 (April 1973): 25-29.(DSC: 4223.020000)

MOSES BOB. “Mississippi 1961-1962.” Liberation 14 January1970, pp.7-17. (DSC: 5186.680000)

O’DELL, JACK H. “Life in Mississippi: an Interview with FannieLou Hamer.” Freedomways 5, no. 2 (1965): 231-42. (DSC:4033.362000)

PARKER, FRANK R. Black Votes Count: Political Empowerment inMississippi after 1965. Chapel Hill: University of North CarolinaPress, 1990, 254pp. (DSC: 90/20339)

PAYNE, CHARLES. I’ve Got the Light of Freedom: the OrganizingTradition and Mississippi Freedom Struggle. Berkeley: University ofCalifornia Press, 1995, 525pp. (YC.1995.b.4382)

------------ “Men Led, But Women Organized: MovementParticipation of Women in the Mississippi Delta.” In Women in the

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Civil Rights Movement, edited by Vicki L. Crawford, Jacqueline AnneRouse, and Barbara Woods, pp.1-11. Brooklyn, NY: CarlsonPublishing, 1990. (YA.1992.b.4526)

ROMAINE, ANNE. “Interview with Fannie Lou Hamer.” SouthernExposure (Spring 1981): 47-48. (P.701/1584)

ROTHSCHILD, MARY AICKIN. A Case of Black and White:Northern Volunteers and the Southern Freedom Summers, 1964-1965.Westport, CT; London: Greenwood Press, 1982, 213pp.(X.809/56715)

RUGABER, WALTER. “We Can’t Cuss White People Any More,it’s in Our Hands Now.” New York Times Magazine, 4 August 1968.(BLNL)

SALAMON, LESTER and STEPHEN VAN EVERA. “Fear, Apathy,and Discrimination: a Test of Three Explanations of PoliticalParticipation.” American Political Science Review 67, no. 4 (1973):1288-1306. (Ac.2380/2)

SALTER, JOHN R., Jr. Jackson, Mississippi: an American Chronicleof Struggle and Schism. Hicksville, NY: Exposition Press, 1979.(YA.1986.b.1310)

SANSING, DAVID G. Making Haste Slowly: the Troubled History ofHigher Education in Mississippi. Jackson: University Press ofMississippi, 1990. (YA.1993.b.4855)

SILVER, JAMES W. Mississippi: the Closed Society. 2nd ed. NewYork: Harcourt, Brace and World, 1966, 375pp. (X.809/2809)

SINSHEIMER, JOSEPH A.. “The Freedom Vote of 1963: NewStrategies of Racial Protest in Mississippi.” Journal of SouthernHistory 55, no. 2 (1989): 217-44. (Ac.8542.a)

------------ “Never Turn Back: an Interview with Sam Block.” SouthernExposure 15 (Summer 1987): 37-50. (P.701/1589)

SITTON, CLAUDE. “Bullets and Ballots in Greenwood, Mississippi.New York Times, 6 April 1963, p.20. (BLNL)

STEWART, JOSEPH, Jr. and JAMES F. SHEFFIELD, Jr. “DoesInterest Group Litigation Matter? The Case of Black PoliticalMobilization in Mississippi.” Journal of Politics 49 (August 1987):780-98. (P.P.6392.ecx)

SUTHERLAND, ELIZABETH. “The Cat and Mouse Game.” TheNation, 14 September 1964, pp.105-6. (BLNL)

THELWELL, MICHAEL. “Fish are Jumping an’ the Cotton is High:Notes from the Mississippi Delta.” Massachusetts Review 7, no. 2(1966): 362-74. (P.P.7615.hd)

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WATTERS, PAT. “Their Text is a Civil Rights Primer.” New YorkTimes Magazine, 20 December 1964. (BLNL)

WIRT, FREDERICK M. The Politics of Southern Equality: Law andChange in a Mississippi County. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press,1970, 335pp. (X.800/7514)

YOUTH of the RURAL ORGANIZING and CULTURAL CENTER.Minds Stayed on Freedom: the Civil Rights Struggle in the RuralSouth. Edited by Jay MacLeod. Boulder: Westview Press, 1991,189pp. (YC.1994.b.3193)

NORTH CAROLINA

BARKSDALE, MARCELLUS C. “Civil Rights Organization and theIndigenous Movement in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, 1960-1965.”Phylon 47 (March 1986): 29-42. (Ac.2685.b/2)

------------ “Robert F. Williams and the Indigenous Civil RightsMovement in Monroe, North Carolina, 1961.” Journal of NegroHistory 69, no. 2 (1984): 73-89. (Ac.8444)

BLUMBERG, HERBERT H. “Accounting for a Nonviolent MassDemonstration.” Sociological Inquiry 38 (Winter 1968): 43-50.(DSC: 8319.625000)

CHAFE, WILLIAM H. Civilities and Civil Rights: Greensboro,North Carolina, and the Black Struggle for Freedom. New York;Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1980, 436pp. (X.529/37256)

------------ “The Greensboro Sit-ins.” Southern Exposure 6 (Fall1978): 78-87. (P.701/1584)

GODWIN, JOHN L. “Tamin’ a Whirlwind: Black Civil RightsLeadership in the Community Setting, Wilmington, North Carolina,1950-1972.” Proceedings of the South Carolina HistoricalAssociation 1992: 67-75. (DSC: 6820.800000n)

KEECH, WILLIAM R. The Impact of Negro Voting: the Role of theVote in the Quest for Equality. Chicago: Rand McNally & Co., 1968,113pp. (X.800/5095)

LADD, EVERETT CARL, Jr. Negro Political Leadership in theSouth. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1966, 348pp.(X.709/4069)

WILLIAMS, ROBERT F. “The Swimming Pool Showdown.”Southern Exposure 8 (Summer 1980): 22-24. (P.701/1584)

TENNESSEE

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DYKEMAN, WILMA and JAMES STOKELY. “Courage in Actionin Clinton, Tennessee.” The Nation, 22 December 1956, pp.531-33.(BLNL)

McKNIGHT, GERALD D. “A Harvest of Hate: the FBI’s Waragainst Black Youth—Domestic Intelligence in Memphis,Tennessee.” South Atlantic Quarterly 86 (Winter 1987): 1-21.(P.P.6338)

------------ “The 1968 Memphis Sanitation Strike and the FBI: a CaseStudy in Urban Surveillance.” South Atlantic Quarterly 83 (Spring1984): 138-56. (P.P.6338)

McMILLEN, NEIL R. “Organized Resistance to SchoolDesegregation in Tennessee.” Tennessee Historical Quarterly 30(Fall 1971): 315-28. (Ac.8471/2)

PROUDFOOT, MERRILL. Diary of a Sit-in. New Haven: Collegeand University Press, 1962, 204pp. (X.809/2019)

WYNN, LINDA T. “The Dawning of a New Day: the Nashville Sit-ins, February 13-May 10, 1960.” Tennessee Historical Quarterly 50,no. 1 (1991): 42-54. (Ac.8471/2)

VIRGINIA

BELFRAGE, SALLY. “Danville on Trial.” New Republic, 2November 1963, pp.11-12. (BLNL)

CHARITY, RUTH HARVEY, CHRISTINA DAVIS and ARTHURKINOY. “Danville Movement: the People’s Law Takes Hold.”Southern Exposure 10, no. 4 (1982): 35-45. (P.701/1584)

ELY, JAMES W. “Negro Demonstrations and the Law: Danville as aTest Case.” Vanderbilt Law Review 27 (October 1974): 927-68.(DSC: 9144.500000)

FITZGERALD, CHARLOTTE D. “The Anatomy of a Movement:Danville, Virginia, as a Case History.” Humanity and Society 12, no.3 (1988): 254-66. (DSC: 4336.581200)

GATES, ROBBINS L. The Making of Massive Resistance: Virginia’sPolitics of Public School Desegregation, 1954-1956. Chapel Hill:University of North Carolina Press, 1964, 224pp. (X.520/1391)

MUSE, BENJAMIN. Virginia’s Massive Resistance. Bloomington:Indiana University Press, 1961, 184pp. (8359.s.1)

SMITH, BOB. They Closed Their Schools: Prince Edward County,Virginia, 1951-1964. Chapel Hill: University of North CarolinaPress, 1965, 281pp. (X.520/1434)

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WASHINGTON, DC

BROOKS, MAXWELL R. “The March on Washington inRetrospect.” Journal of Human Relations 12 (January 1964): 73-87.(DSC: 5003.420000)

JONES, BEVERLEY W. “Before Montgomery and Greensboro: theDesegregation Movement in the District of Columbia, 1950-1953.”Phylon 43, no. 2 (1982): 144-54. (Ac.2685.b/2)

RUSTIN, BAYARD. “The Washington March: a Ten-YearPerspective.” Crisis 80 (August 1973): 224-27. (P.523/130)

THELWELL, MICHAEL. “The August 28th March on Washington.”Presence Africaine 21, no. 49 (1964). (DSC: 6609.710000)

VANDER ZANDEN, JAMES W. “For Jobs and Freedom: ThreeViews of the Washington March.” Midwest Quarterly 5, no. 2(1964): 99-108. (Ac.9234.te)

OTHER STATES

ANDERSON, ALAN B. and GEORGE W. PICKERING.Confronting the Color Line: the Broken Promise of the Civil RightsMovement in Chicago. Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1986,515pp. (DSC: 87/08339)

BLUMBERG, RHODA L. “Careers of Women Civil RightsActivists.” Journal of Sociology and Social Welfare 7 (1980): 708-29. (DSC: 5064.935000)

------------ “White Mothers in the American Civil Rights Movement.”In Research in the Interweave of Social Roles: Women and Men,edited by Helena A. Lopata, vol. 1, pp.33-50. Greenwich, CT: JAIPress, 1980. (P.521/3611)

BROCK, ANNETTE K. “Gloria Richardson and the CambridgeMovement.” In Women in the Civil Rights Movement, edited by VickiI. Crawford, Jacqueline Anne Rouse, and Barbara Woods, pp.121-44.Brooklyn, NY: Carlson Publishing, 1990. (YA.1992.b.4526)

CHASTEEN, EDGAR. “Public Accommodations: SocialMovements in Conflict.” In Social Movements and Social Change,edited by Robert I. Lauer, pp.156-73. Carbondale: Southern IllinoisUniversity Press, 1976. (X.800/26006)

GRAVES, CARL T. “The Right to Be Served: Oklahoma City’sLunch Counter Sit-ins, 1958-1964.” Chronicles of Oklahoma 59(Summer 1981): 361-73. (Ac.8484)

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JOHNSTON, JOYCE. “Communism vs. Segregation: Evolution ofthe Committee to Investigate Communist Activities in SouthCarolina.” Proceedings of the South Carolina Association 1993: 19-29. (DSC: 6820.800000n)

KEMPTON, MURRAY. “Gloria, Gloria.” New Republic, 16November 1963, pp.15-17. (BLNL)

LADD, EVERETT CARLL, Jr. Negro Political Leadership in theSouth. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1966, 348pp.(X.709/4069)

LIPSITZ, GEORGE. A Life In the Struggle: Ivory Perry and theCulture of Opposition. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1988,292pp. (YA.1990.b.4869)

MEIER, AUGUST, THOMAS S. PLAUT and CURTIS SMOTHERS.“Case Study in Nonviolent Direct Action.” The Crisis 71 (December1964): 573-78. (P.523/130)

MILOBSKY, DAVID. “Power from the Pulpit: Baltimore’s African-American Clergy, 1950-1970.” Maryland Historical Magazine 89,no. 3 (1994): 274-289. (Ac.8398/9)

NELSON, JACK and JACK BASS. The Orangeburg Massacre.[Macon, GA] Mercer, 1984. (YA.1988.b.5992)

OLDENDORF, SANDRA B. “The South Carolina Sea IslandsCitizenship Schools, 1957-1961.” In Women in the Civil RightsMovement, edited by Vicki L. Crawford, Jacqueline Anne Rouse, andBarbara Woods, pp.169-82. Brooklyn, NY: Carlson Publishing,1990. (YA.1992.b.4526)

SILBERMAN, CHARLES. Crisis in Black and White. London:Jonathan Cape, 1965, 370pp. (X.809/1623)

VON ESCHEN, DONALD, JEROME KIRK and MAURICEPINARD. “The Conditions of Direct Action in a DemocraticSociety.” Western Political Quarterly 22 (June 1969): 309-25.(Ac.2690.rc)

WALLACE, DAVID M. “From the Fullness of the Earth: the Storyof Chicago’s Operation Breadbasket.” Chicago TheologicalSeminary Register, 57 (November 1966): 16-20. (DSC: 7336.950000)

WOODS, BARBARA A. “Modjeska Simkins and the South CarolinaConference of the NAACP, 1939-1957.” In Women in the CivilRights Movement, edited by Vicki L. Crawford, Jacqueline AnneRouse, and Barbara Woods, pp.99-120. Brooklyn, NY: CarlsonPublishing, 1990. (YA.1992.b.4526)

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YARBROUGH, TINSLEY E. A Passion for Justice: J. WatiesWaring and Civil Rights. New York; Oxford: Oxford UniversityPress, 1987, 282pp. (YC.1988.b.5012)

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OTHER TOPICS

LEADERSHIP

ARCHER, JULES. They Had a Dream: the Civil Rights StruggleFrom Frederick Douglass to Marcus Garvey to Martin Luther Kingand Malcolm X. London: Puffin, 1996. (YC.1996.a.3193)

CAPECI, DOMINIC J., Jr. “From Harlem to Montgomery: the BusBoycott and Leadership of Adam Clayton Powell, Jr., and MartinLuther King, Jr.” Historian 41 (August 1979): 721-37. (P.P.8004.dv)

CLARK, KENNETH B. “The Management of the Civil RightsStruggle.” In Freedom Now! The Civil Rights Struggle in America,edited by Alan F. Westin, pp.30-40. New York: Basic Books, 1964.(X.709/1394)

D’EMILIO, JOHN, ed. The Civil Rights Struggle: Leaders in Profile.New York: Facts on File; Oxford: Clio, 1979. (X.802/11246)

GARROW, DAVID J. “Black Ministerial Protest Leadership, 1955-1970.” In Encyclopedia of Religion in the South, edited by Samuel S.Hill, pp.106-108. Macon, GA: Mercer University Press, 1984.(YA.1989.b.5027)

HINES, RALPH H. and JAMES E. PIERCE. “Negro Leadershipafter the Social Crisis: an Analysis of Leadership Changes inMontgomery, Alabama.” Phylon 26, no. 2 (1965): 162-72.(Ac.2685.b/2)

KILLIAN, LEWIS M. “Leadership in the Desegregation Crisis: anInstitutional Analysis.” In Intergroup Relations and Leadership,edited by Muzafer Sherif, pp.142-66. New York; London: JohnWiley & Sons, 1962. (8418.g.17)

------------ and CHARLES M. GRIGG. Racial Crisis in America:Leadership in Conflict. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall Press,1964, 144pp. (X.809/92)

KILLIAN, LEWIS M. and CHARLES U. SMITH. “Negro ProtestLeaders in a Southern Community.” Social Forces 38 (March 1960):253-57. (P.P.8001.fc)

LADD, EVERETT CARLL, Jr. Negro Political Leadership in theSouth. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1966, 348pp.(X.709/4069)

MCWHORTER, GERALD and ROBERT CRAIN. “SubcommunityGladitorial Competition: Civil Rights Leadership as a CompetitiveProcess.” Social Forces 46 (September 1967): 8-21. (P.P.8001.fc)

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MORRISON, MINION K. C. Black Political Mobilization:Leadership, Power, and Mass Behaviour. Albany: State University ofNew York Press, 1987, 303pp. (YA.1988.b.2532)

NELSON, HAROLD A. “Leadership and Change in an EvolutionaryMovement: an Analysis of Change in the Leadership Structure of theSouthern Civil Rights Movement.” Social Forces 49 (1971): 353-71.(P.P.8001.fc)

OBERSCHALL, ANTHONY. “Mobilization, Leaders, and Followersin the Civil Rights Movement in the United States, 1950 to 1970.” InSocial Conflict and Social Movements, pp.204-42. Englewood Cliffs,NJ: Prentice Hall Press, 1973. (X.520/7363)

PARIS, PETER J. Black Leaders in Conflict: Joseph H Jackson,Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, Adam Clayton Powell Jr. NewYork; Philadelphia: Pilgrim Press, 1978. (X.809/48792)

ROGERS, KIM LACY. “Organizational Experience and PersonalNarrative: Stories of New Orleans’ Civil Rights Leadership.” OralHistory Review 13 (1985): 23-54. (P.701/771)

WALKER, JACK L. “The Functions of Disunity: Negro Leadershipin a Southern city.” Journal of Negro Education 32 (Summer 1963):227-36. (P.P.8003.og)

WALKER, JACK L. “Protest and Negotiation: a Case Study ofNegro Leadership in Atlanta, Georgia.” Midwest Journal of PoliticalScience 7 (May 1963): 99-124. (P.P.8000.te)

WALZER, MICHAEL. “The Politics of the New Negro.” Dissent 7,no. 3 (1960): 235-43. (P.P.3558.iwa)

WARREN, ROBERT PENN. Who Speaks for the Negro? NewYork: Random House, 1965, 454pp. (X.529/62593)

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MARTIN LUTHER KING, Jr.

A vast amount of periodical literature has been written about MartinLuther King, Jr. Some of the most notable articles are included here,but readers requiring more citations should consult Roger A. Fischer,William H. Fischer, and Sherman E. Pyatt (all listed below) as well asAmerica History and Life (P.1855/6).

ALBERT, PETER J. and RONALD HOFFMAN, eds. We ShallOvercome: Martin Luther King, Jr., and the Black FreedomMovement. New York: Pantheon Books, 1990. (YA.1991.b.8083)

ANSBRO, JOHN J. Martin Luther King, Jr.: the Making of a Mind.Maryknoll: Orbis, 1982. (X.520/29592)

ASSENSOH, A. B. Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and America’sQuest for Racial Integration: with Historical Testimonies FromKing’s Former Class-mates, Close Friends and Colleagues.Ilfracombe: Stockwell, 1987. (YC.1987.a.6749)

BAKER, PATRICIA. Martin Luther King. London: Wayland, 1974,96pp. (X.809/20570)

BALDWIN, LEWIS V. There is a Balm in Gilead: the Cultural Rootsof Martin Luther King, Jr. Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1991.(YA.1993.a.18749)

---------- To Make the Wounded Whole: the Cultural Legacy of MartinLuther King, Jr. Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1992. (DSC: 92/06873)

---------- Toward the Beloved Community: Martin Luther King, Jr.,and South Africa. Cleveland: Pilgrim Press, 1995. (DSC: 96/06202)

BARUAH, UPENDRA KUMAR. Portrait of a Gandhian: aBiography of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Gauhati: Baruah, 1985.(YA.1986.a.2489)

“BECOMING MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR.: PLAGIARISM ANDORIGINALITY: A ROUND TABLE.” Journal of American History78 (1991): 11-123. (Ac.8408/2)

BEIFUSS, JOAN TURNER. At the River I Stand: Memphis, the 1968Strike, and Martin Luther King. Memphis: B. & W. Books, 1985.(DSC: 86/09202)

BENNETT, LERONE. What Manner of a Man: a Biography ofMartin Luther King, Jr. London: Allen & Unwin, 1966, 245pp.(X.700/1289)

BISHOP, JAMES ALONZO. The Days of Martin Luther King, Jr.New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, [1971], 516pp. (X.809/16595)

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BOESAK, ALLAN AUBREY. Coming In Out of the Wilderness: aComparative Interpretation of the Ethics of Martin Luther King, Jr.and Malcolm X. Kampen: J. H. Kok, 1976. (X.108/16554)

BRANCH, TAYLOR. Parting the Waters: Martin Luther King andthe Civil Rights Movement, 1954-1963. London: Papermac, 1990.(YC.1991.b.5103)

CALLOWAY-THOMAS, CAROLYN and JOHN LOUISLUCAITES. Martin Luther King, Jr., and the Sermonic Power ofPublic Discourse. Tuscaloosa; London: University of Alabama Press,1993. (YC.1993.b.8795)

CHESTER, LEWIS. Martin Luther King. Geneva: Edito-Service,1971, 360pp. (X.809/10672)

COLAIACO, JAMES A. Martin Luther King, Jr.: Apostle of MilitantNon-Violence. Basingstoke: Macmillan, 1993. (YC.1994.a.3788)

DAVIES, T. J. Martin Luther King. Abertawe: Gwasg John Penry,1969. (YA.1990.a.15140)

DOWNING, FREDERICK L. To See the Promised Land: the FaithPilgrimage of Martin Luther King, Jr. Mercer University Press, 1986.(DSC: 86/25615)

DREWERY, MARY. Martin Luther King: the Man whocould not Hate. Basingstoke: Marshalls, 1984. (X.208/10235)

EDMUND, T. Martin Luther King and the Black Americans’ ProtestMovement in the USA. Delhi: New Heights, 1976.(YA.1988.a.20477)

FAIRCLOUGH, ADAM. Martin Luther King, Jr. Athens; London:University of Georgia Press, 1995. (DSC: 95/12507)

---------- “The Preachers and the People: the Origins and Early Yearsof the SCLC.” Journal of Southern History 52 (1986): 403-40.(Ac.8542.a)

--------- To Redeem the Soul of America: the Southern ChristianLeadership Conference and Martin Luther King, Jr. Athens:University of Georgia Press, 1987. (YA.1993.b.7727)

---------- “The SCLC and the Second Reconstruction, 1957-1963.”South Atlantic Quarterly 80 (1981): 177-94. (P.P.6338)

FISCHER, ROGER A. “Capstone for a Generation: Martin LutherKing, Jr., and the Civil Rights Movement in Civil RightsHistoriography.” Choice 27, no. 6 (1990): 911-15. (DSC:3181.534500n)

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FISCHER, WILLIAM H. Free At Last: a Bibliography of MartinLuther King, Jr. Metuchen, NJ; London: Scarecrow Press, 1976,169pp. (X.529/32101)

FLUKER, WALTER E. They Looked for a City: a ComparativeAnalysis of the Ideal of Community in the Thought of HowardThurman and Martin Luther King, Jr. Lanham; London: UniversityPress of America, 1989. (YC.1990.a.3831)

FRANK, GEROLD. An American Death: the True Story of theAssassination of Dr Martin Luther King, Jr, and the GreatestManhunt of Our Time. London: Hamilton, 1972, 494pp.(X.200/5653)

GARROW, DAVID J. Bearing the Cross: Martin Luther King, Jr andthe Southern Christian Leadership Conference. London: Cape 1988.(YC.1989.a.263)

------------ The FBI and Martin Luther King, Jr.: from “Solo” toMemphis. New York: W. W. Norton, 1981. (X.809/66423)

------------, ed. Martin Luther King, Jr.: Civil Rights Leader,Theologian, Orator. 3 vols. Brooklyn: Carlson Publishing, 1989.(DSC: 92/03915-7 vols 1-3)

------------ Protest at Selma: Martin Luther King, Jr. and the VotingRights Act of 1965. New Haven; London: Yale University Press,1979. (X.700/26281)

GERASIMOV, GENNADY. Fire Bell in the Night. [On theAssassination of Martin Luther King.] Moscow: Novosti PressAgency Publishing House, [1968]. (X.808/4705)

MARTIN LUTHER KING, Jr. PAPERS PROJECT. A Guide toResearch on Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Modern Black FreedomStruggle. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Libraries, 1989. (DSC:6227.1308 no. 1)

HALEY, ALEX. [Playboy interview with Martin Luther King, Jr.] inG. Barry Golson, ed., The Playboy Interview. New York: PlayboyPress, 1981, pp.112-35. (DSC: 81/16725)

HANIGAN, JAMES P. Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Foundationsof Nonviolence. Lanham; London: University Press of America, 1984.(X.529/71005)

HARDING, VINCENT. Martin Luther King, the Inconvenient Hero.Maryknoll, NY: Orbis, 1996. (YC.1997.a.2207)

HOLT, JULIA. Martin Luther King. London: Hodder & Stoughton,1996. (YK.1997.a.3473)

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HUIE, WILLIAM BRADFORD. He Slew the Dreamer: My Searchwith James Earl Ray for the Truth about the Murder of Martin LutherKing. London: W. H. Allen, 1970, 222pp. (X.200/3759)

HUNTER, NIGEL. Martin Luther King. Wayland, 1985.(YK.1988.b.5407)

KING, CORETTA SCOTT. My Life With Martin Luther King, Jr.London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1970. (X.200/3505)

KING, MARTIN LUTHER KING, Jr. The Papers of Martin LutherKing, Jr. Vol. 1: Called to Serve, January 1929-June 1951. Berkeley;London: University of California Press, 1992. (YC.1993.b.4041) Vol.2: Rediscovering Precious Values, July 1951-November 1955.Berkeley; London: University of California Press, 1994.(YC.1995.b.1100) Vol. 3: Birth of a New Age. Berkeley; London:University of California Press, 1997. (YC.1997.b.4598)

---------- A Drum Major For Justice (From a Sermon by the Rev.Martin Luther King, Jr.) Bushey Heath: Taurus Press, 1968.(Cup.510.bea.4)

---------- Quotations on Peace and Justice, Racialism and Nonviolenceby and about Martin Luther King. London: Peace Pledge Union,1982. (YC.1991.a.4839)

--------- Stride Toward Freedom: the Montgomery Story. New York:Harper & Row, 1958, 230pp. (X.809/27898)

---------- A Testament of Hope: the Essential Writings of MartinLuther King, Jr. San Francisco; London: Harper & Row, 1986.(YC.1987.b.1470)

---------- The Trumpet of Conscience. London: Hodder & Stoughton,1968, 93pp. (X.808/4522)

---------- [Where Do We Go From Here?]: Chaos or Community?London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1968, 209pp. (X.809/4814)

---------- Why We Can’t Wait. New York: New American Library,1964, 159pp. (X.708/2017)

---------- Words & Wisdom of Martin Luther King. Bushey Heath:Taurus Press, [1970]. (Cup.510.bea.14)

---------- The Words of Martin Luther King (Selected by Coretta ScottKing). London: Fount, 1985. (YC.1989.2968)

KONDRASHOV, STANISLAV. The Life and Death of MartinLuther King. Moscow; London: Progress, 1981. (X.958/10525)

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LAKE, L. B. The Relation Between Agapeic Love and NonviolentDirect Action in the Thinking of Martin Luther King, Jr. Edinburgh:University of Edinburgh, 1984. (DSC: 51529/84)

LANE, MARK and DICK GREGORY. Murder in Memphis: the FBIand the Assassination of Martin Luther King. New York: Thunder’sMouth Press, 1993. (DSC: 95/28706)

LENTZ, RICHARD. Symbols, the News Magazines and MartinLuther King. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1990.(DSC: 90/18739)

LINCOLN, C. ERIC, ed. Martin Luther King, Jr.: a Profile. NewYork: Hill and Wang, 1984. (DSC: 87/02751)

LISCHER, RICHARD. The Preacher King: Martin Luther King, Jr.and the Word That Moved America. New York; Oxford: OxfordUniversity Press, 1995. (YC.1995.b.4831)

LOKOS, LIONEL. House Divided: the Life and Legacy of MartinLuther King, Jr. New Rochelle: Arlington House, 1969, 567pp.(X.809/10341)

McKISSACK, PATRICIA C. Martin Luther King, Jr.: Man of Peace.Hillside, NJ; Aldershot: Enslow, 1991. (YK.1993.a.8031)

MILLER, KEITH D. Voice of Deliverance: the Language of MartinLuther King, Jr., and Its Source. New York: Free Press, 1992. (DSC:93/09076)

MORGAN, NINA. Martin Luther King. Wayland, 1993.(YK.1993.b.7517)

MOSES, GREG. Revolution of Conscience: Martin Luther King, Jr.,and the Philosophy of Nonviolence. New York; London: GuildfordPress, 1997. (DSC: 97/13173)

NAVEH, EYAL J. Crown of Thorns: Political Martyrdom in Americafrom Abraham Lincoln to Martin Luther King, Jr. New York;London: New York University Press, 1990. (YC.1990.b.7635)

OATES, STEPHEN. Builders of the Dream: Abraham Lincoln andMartin Luther King, Jr. Fort Wayne: Louis A. Warren LincolnLibrary and Museum, 1982. (YA.1987.b.1700)

---------- “The Intellectual Odyssey of Martin Luther King.”Massachusetts Review 22 (1981): 301-320. (P.P.7615.hd)

---------- Let the Trumpet Sound: the Life of Martin Luther King, Jr.London: Search Press, 1982. (DSC: 83/02164)

OWEN, R. J. Free at Last: the Story of Martin Luther King. Exeter:Religious Education Press, 1980. (X.529/55650)

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PATTERSON, LILLIE. Martin Luther King, Jr., and the FreedomMovement. New York: Facts on File, 1989. (YC.1994.a.1944)

POWER, JOHNATHAN. Martin Luther King: a Reassessment. PeacePledge Union, 1983. (DSC: 93/03204)

PYATT, SHERMAN E. Martin Luther King, Jr.: an AnnotatedBibliography. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1986, 154pp. (DSC:1993.09705 no. 12)

RALPH, JAMES R. Northern Protest, Martin Luther King, Jr.,Chicago, and the Civil Rights Movement. Cambridge, MA: HarvardUniversity Press, 1993. (DSC: 93/22760)

RATHBUN, JOHN E. “Martin Luther King: the Theology of SocialAction.” Atlantic Quarterly 20 (1968): 38-53. (P.861/353)

REDDICK, LAWRENCE DUNBAR. Crusader Without Violence: aBiography of Martin Luther King. New York: Harper & Bros, [1959],243pp. (10892.r.12)

RICHARDSON, NIGEL. Martin Luther King. London: HamishHamilton, 1983. (X.529/55627)

“A ROUND TABLE: MARTIN LUTHER KING, Jr.” Journal ofAmrerican History 74 (1987): 436-81. (Ac.8408/2)

SCHLOREDT, VALERIE. Martin Luther King: America’s GreatNon-Violent Leader, who was Murdered in the Struggle for BlackRights. Wisbech: LDA, 1989. (YK.1991.a.12426)

SCHULKE, FLIP. He Had a Dream: Martin Luther King, Jr., and theCivil Rights Movement. New York; London: W. W. Norton, 1995.(LB.31.b.10614)

SHARMA, MOHAN LAL. “Martin Luther King: Modern America’sGreatest Theologian of Social Action.” Journal of Negro History 53(1968): 257-63. (Ac.8444)

SHUKER, NANCY. Martin Luther King. London: Burke, 1988.(YC.1988.b.6382)

SLACK, KENNETH. Martin Luther King. London: SCM Press,1970, 121pp. (X.108/9815)

SMITH, ERVIN. The Ethics of Martin Luther King, Jr. New York:Edwin Mellen, 1981. (DSC: 8489.088 v. 2)

SMITH, KENNETH L. Search for the Beloved Community: theThinking of Martin Luther King, Jr. Lanham; London: UniversityPress of America, 1986. (YC.1987.a.5025)

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STEINKRAUS, WARREN E. “Martin Luther King’s Personalismand Nonviolence.” Journal of the History of Ideas 34 (1973): 97-111.(P.P.1247.eak)

TIERNEY, MARTIN. Martin Luther King. Veritas, 1986.(YK.1992.a.993)

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, DEPARTMENT OF STATE. TheJames Earl Ray Extradition File: Papers Submitted to Great Britainfor the Extradition of James Earl Ray to Face Trial for the Murder ofMartin Luther King, Jr. New York; Lemma: Gerrards Cross, 1971.(X.200/39245)

WALTON, HANES. The Political Philosophy of Martin Luther King,Jr. Westport, CT: Greenwood Publishing Co, 1972, 137pp.(X.0809/504(10))

WARD, BRIAN AND TONY BADGER, eds. The Making of MartinLuther King and the Civil Rights Movement. Macmillan, 1995.(YC.1996.a.1375)

WASHINGTON, JAMES MELVIN, ED. A Testament of Hope: theEssential Writings of Martin Luther King, Jr. San Francisco: Harper& Row, 1986. (DSC: 86/06995)

WATLEY, WILLIAM D. Roots of Resistance: the Nonviolent Ethicof Martin Luther King, Jr. Valley Forge, PA: Judson Press, 1985.(DSC: 89/26299)

WHITE, JOHN. Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Civil RightsMovement in America. Hanley: J.H. Brookes, 1991. (BAAS Pamphletno. 21). (DSC: 1854.26 21)

WILSON, E. L. An Analysis and Interpretation of the Life, Writings,and Philosophy of Martin Luther King, Jr. Oxford: Oxford UniversityPress, 1981. (DSC: 39622/82)

WITHERSPOON, WILLIAM ROGER. Martin Luther King, Jr.: tothe Mountaintop. Garden City: Doubleday, 1985. (DSC: 85/35373)

MALCOLM X

For periodical articles about Malcolm X readers are advised toconsult Lenwood G. Davis and Timothy V. Johnson.

ASANTE, MOLEFI K. Malcolm X as a Cultural Hero: and OtherAfrocentric Essays. Trenton: Africa World Press, 1993.(YA.1996.a.1205)

BOESAK, ALLAN AUBREY. Coming in Out of the Wilderness: aComparative Interpretation of the Ethics of Martin Luther King, Jr.

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and Malcolm X. Kampen: Uitgeversmaatschappij, 1976.(X.108/16554)

BREITMAN, GEORGE. The Assassination of Malcolm X. New York;London: Pathfinder, 1976. (YK.1994.a.2755)

------------ The Last Year of Malcolm X: the Evolution of aRevolutionary. New York: Merit Publishers, [1967], 169pp.(X.709/6235)

CARSON, CLAYBORNE. Malcolm X: the FBI File. New York:Carroll & Graf Publishers, 1991. (YA.1993.b.2959)

CLARKE, JOHN HENRIK, ed. Malcolm X: the man and his Times.Trenton, NJ: Africa World Press, 1969. (DSC: 94/10944)

DAVIS, LENWOOD G. Malcolm X: a Selected Bibliography.Westport, CT: London: Greenwood Press, 1984. (X.950/40008)

DeCARO, LOUIS A. On the Side of My People: a Religious Life ofMalcolm X. New York; London: New York University Press, 1996.(YC.1996.b.947)

DOCTOR, BERNARD AQUINA. Malcolm X for Beginners. Writersand Readers, 1992. (YC.1993.b.5982)

DYSON, MICHAEL ERIC. Making Malcolm: the Myth and Meaningof Malcolm X. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1995.(YC.1995.a.2826)

ENSSLEN, KLAUS. The Autobiography of Malcolm X. Munchen:Fink, 1983. (YA.1987.a.1925)

EVANZZ, KARL. The Judas Factor: the Plot to Kill Malcolm X.New York: Thunder’s Mouth Press, 1992. (YA.1993.b.6646)

GALLEN, DAVID. Malcolm X as they Knew Him. New York: Carroll& Graf, 1992. (YA.1993.b.6575)

GOLDMAN, PETER. The Death and Life of Malcolm X. London:Gollancz, 1974, 438pp. (X.809/19083)

JAMAL, HAKIM A. From the Dead Level: Malcolm X and Me.London: Deutsch, 1971, 240pp. (X.809/10405)

JOHNSON, TIMOTHY V. Malcolm X: a Comprehensive AnnotatedBibliography. New York; London: Garland, 1986. (2725.d.405)

LEADER, EDWARD ROLAND. Understanding Malcolm X: theControversial Changes in his Political Philosophy. New York:Vantage Press, 1993. (DSC: 95/15749)

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LOMAX, LOUIS EMANUEL. When the Word is Given. [A Report onElijah Muhammad, Malcolm X and the Black Muslim World.] NewYork: New American Library, 1964, 192pp. (X.108/6394)

MEALY, ROSEMARI. Fidel and Malcolm: Memories of a Meeting.Melbourne: Ocean, 1993. (YA.1996.a.5045)

OVENDEN, KEVIN. Malcolm X: Socialism and Black Nationalism.London: Bookmarks, 1992. (YC.1993.a.739)

SALES, WILLIAM W. From Civil Rights to Black Liberation:Malcolm X and the Organization of Afro-American Unity. Boston:South End Press, 1994. (DSC: 94/14249)

STRICKLAND, WILLIAM. Malcolm X: Make It Plain. New York;London: Penguin, 1995. (YC.1995.b.6661)

WOLFENSTEIN, EUGENE VICTOR. The Victims of Democracy:Malcolm X and the Black Revolution. Berkeley; London: Universityof California Press, 1981. (X.800/30827)

WOOD, JOE, ed. Malcolm X: in our own Image. New York; London:Anchor Books, 1994. (YA.1995.a.16880)

X, MALCOLM. The Autobiography of Malcolm X. London:Hutchinson & Co., 1966, 462pp. (X.800/1264)

---------- “Black Muslims and Civil Rights.” Playboy, May 1963,pp.53-63. (Cup.804.e.8)

---------- By Any Means Necessary: Speeches, Interviews, and a Letterby Malcolm X. Edited by George Breitman. New York: Pathfinder,1970. (DSC: 91/07488)

---------- Malcolm X and the Negro Revolution: the Speeches ofMalcolm X. London: Owen, 1969, 192pp. (X.709/8478)

---------- Malcolm X on Afro-American History. New York: Pathfinder,1990. (DSC: 92/03547)

---------- Malcolm X Speaks: Selected Speeches and Statements.London: Secker & Warburg, 1966, 226pp. (X.709/3689)

----------- Malcolm X: Speeches at Harvard. New York: Paragon,1991. (YA.1993.a.14771)

---------- Malcolm X Talks to Young People: Speeches in the US,Britain, and Africa. Edited by Steve Clark. New York: Pathfinder,1991. (DSC: 91/07597)

---------- Malcolm X: The Last Speeches. New York; London:Pathfinder, 1989. (YC.1990.a.4261)

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---------- Two Speeches. New York: Pathfinder, 1988. (DSC:89/01531)

---------- The Speeches of Malcolm X at Harvard. New York: WilliamMorrow & Co., [1968], 191pp. (X.809/8150)

PUBLIC OPINION

ABERBACH, JOEL D. and JACK L. WALKER. “The Meanings ofBlack Power: a Comparison of White and Black Interpretations of aPolitical Slogan.” American Political Science Review 64 (1970): 367-88. (Ac.2380/2)

BURSTEIN, PAUL. “Public Opinion Demonstrations, and thePassage of Anti-Discrimination Legislation.” Public OpinionQuarterly 43 (Summer 1979): 157-73. (P.P.6392.eck)

CAMPBELL, ANGUS. White Attitudes Toward Black People. AnnArbor, MI: Institute for Social Research, 1971, 177pp. (X.519/13485)

ERSKINE, HAZEL. “The Polls: Demonstrations and Race Riots.”Public Opinion Quarterly 31 (Winter 1967): 655-77. (P.P.6392.eck)

------------ “The Polls: Negro Employment.” Public OpinionQuarterly 32 (Spring 1968): 132-53. (P.P.6392.eck)

------------ “The Polls: Negro Housing.” Public Opinion Quarterly32 (Fall 1967): 482-98. (P.P.6392.eck)

------------ “The Polls: Race Relations.” Public Opinion Quarterly 26(Spring 1962): 137-48. (P.P.6392.eck)

------------ “The Polls: Opinion on Racial Problems.” Public OpinionQuarterly 32 (Winter 1968): 696-703. (P.P.6392.eck)

------------ “The Polls: Speed of Racial Integration.” Public OpinionQuarterly 32 (Fall 1968): 513-24. (P.P.6392.eck)

------------ “The Polls: World Opinion on U.S. Racial Problems.”Public Opinion Quarterly 32 (Summer 1968): 299-312.(P.P.6392.eck)

HYMAN, HERBERT H. and PAUL B. SHEATSLEY. “AttitudesToward Desegregation.” Scientific American 211, no. 1 (1964): 16-23. (P.P.1612.f)

LUBELL, SAMUEL. Black and White: Test of a Nation. New York:Harper & Row, 1964, 210pp. (X.808/3150)

MARX, GARY T. Protest and Prejudice: a Study of Belief in theBlack Community. New York: Harper & Row, 1967, 228pp.(X.800/3338)

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------------ “Religion: Opiate or Inspiration of Civil Rights Militancyamong Negroes?” American Sociological Review 32, no. 1 (1969):64-72. (Ac.2285/2)

SCHWARTZ, MILDRED. Trends in White Attitudes towardNegroes. Report no. 119. Chicago: National Opinion ResearchCenter, 1967, 134pp. (X.709/13158)

TAYLOR, D. GARTH, PAUL B. SHEATSLEY and ANDREW M.GREELEY. “Attitudes toward Racial Integration.” ScientificAmerican 238, no. 6 (1978): 42-49. (P.P.1612.f)

WHITE REACTION

BADGER, ANTHONY J. “Segregation and the Southern BusinessElite.” Journal of American Studies 18 (1984): 105-109. (Ac.8542.a)

BARTLEY, NUMAN V. The Rise of Massive Resistance: Race andPolitics in the South During the 1950’s. Baton Rouge: LouisianaState University Press, 1969, 390pp. (X.5975)

BELKNAP, MICHAEL R. “The Legal Legacy of Lemuel Penn.”Howard Law Journal 25 (1982): 457-524. (DSC: 4335.247000)

BLACK, EARL. Southern Governors and Civil Rights: RacialSegregation as a Campaign Issue in the Second Reconstruction.Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1976, 408pp. (X.800/11633)

BLASI, ANTHONY J. Segregationist Violence and Civil RightsMovements in Tuscaloosa. Washington, DC: University Press ofAmerica, 1980, 168pp. (DSC: 80/11386)

BRADEN, WALDO W. “The Rhetoric of a Closed Society.”Southern Speech Communication Journal 45 (Summer 1980): 333-51.(DSC: 8355.700000)

BREED, WARREN. “Group Structure and Resistance toDesegregation in the South.” Social Problems 10, no. 1 (1962): 84-94. (P.521/945)

BROOKS, GARY H. and WILLIAM CLAGGETT. “Black ElectoralPower, White Resistance, and Legislative Behavior.” PoliticalBehavior 3, no. 1 (1981): 49-68. (DSC: 6543.873000)

COLBY, DAVID C. “White Violence and the Civil RightsMovement.” In Blacks in Southern Politics, edited by Laurence W.Moreland, Robert P. Steed and Tod A. Baker, pp.31-48. New York:Praeger Publishers, 1987. (DSC: 88/03190)

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CROWTHER, EDWARD R. “Alabama’s Fight to MaintainSegregated Schools, 1953-1956.” Alabama Review 43, no. 3 (1990):206-225. (P.P.7612.og)

DRAPER, ALAN. Conflict of Interests: Organized Labor and theCivil Rights Movement in the South, 1954-1968. Ithaca, NY: ILRPress, 1994. (YA.1995.b.1488)

HOROWITZ, DAVID ALLEN. “White Southerners, Alienation, andCivil Rights: the Response to Corporate Liberalism, 1956-1965.”Journal of Southern History 54, no. 2 (1988): 173-203. (Ac.8542.a)

JACOWAY, ELIZABETH AND DAVID R. COLBURN. SouthernBusinessmen and Desegregation. Baton Rouge; London: LouisianaState University Press, 1982. (X.520/29427)

KALLAL, EDWARD W., Jr. “St. Augustine and the Ku Klux Klan:1963 and 1964.” In St. Augustine, edited by David J. Garrow, pp.93-176. Brooklyn, NY: Carlson Publishing 1989. (DSC: 95/19404)

KILPATRICK, JAMES J. The Southern Case for SchoolSegregation. New York: Crowell-Collier Press, 1962, 220pp.(8359.s.21)

LEVESQUE, RUSSELL J. “White Response to Nonwhite VoterRegistration in the Southern States.” Pacific Sociological Review 15(April 1972): 245-55. (P.P.8004.qr)

MCMILLEN, NEIL R. The Citizens’ Council: Organized Resistanceto the Second Reconstruction, 1954-1964. Urbana: University ofIllinois Press, 1971, 397pp. (X.800/6827)

------------ “Organized Resistance to School Desegregation inTennessee.” Tennessee Historical Quarterly 30 (Fall 1971): 315-28.(Ac.8471/2)

------------ “White Citizens’ Council and Resistance to SchoolDesegregation in Arkansas.” Arkansas Historical Quarterly 30(Spring 1971): 95-122. (P.P.8004.fr)

MANIS, ANDREW MICHAEL. Southern Civil Religions in Conflict:Black and White Baptists and Civil Rights, 1947-1957. Athens:University of Georgia Press, 1987. (YA.1993.b.7597)

MARTIN, JOHN BARTLOW. The Deep South Says Never. NewYork: Ballantine Books, 1957, 181pp. (8178.aa.9)

MUSE, BENJAMIN. Virginia’s Massive Resistance. Bloomington:Indiana University Press, 1961, 184pp. (8359.s.1)

O’BRIEN, THOMAS. “Georgia’s Response to Brown vs. Board ofEducation, 1954-1961.” Proceedings of the South CarolinaHistorical Association 1992: 55-66. (DSC: 6820.800000n)

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PETERS, WILLIAM. The Southern Temper. [On the Progress ofDesegregation in the Southern States of the USA.] Garden City, NY:Doubleday & Co., 1959. (10413.m.39)

ROWE, GARY THOMAS., Jr. My Undercover Years with the KuKlux Klan. New York: Bantam Books, 1976, 216pp. (X.708/2063)

RUSTIN, BAYARD. “Fear in the Delta.” Liberation 1 (December1956): 17-19. (P.701/1409)

SCHAEFER, RICHARD T. “The Ku Klux Klan: Continuity andChange.” Phylon 32, no. 2 (1971): 143-57. (Ac.2685.b/2)

SITTON, CLAUDE. “Bullets and Ballots in Greenwood,Mississippi.” In Freedom Now! The Struggle for Civil Rights inAmerica, edited by Alan. F. Westin, pp.87-94. New York: BasicBooks, 1964. (X.709/1394)

SMITH, BOB. They Closed their Schools: Prince Edward County,Virginia, 1951-1964. Chapel Hill: University of North CarolinaPress, 1965, 281pp. (X.520/1434)

SMITH, FRANK. Congressman from Mississippi. New York:Capricorn Books, 1964, 338pp. (X.709/5692)

VANDER ZANDEN, JAMES W. “The Klan Revival.” AmericanJournal of Sociology 65 (March 1960): 456-62. (Ac.2691.d/12)

------------ “Seven Years of Southern Resistance.” Midwest Quarterly2 (1961): 273-84. (P.521/350)

------------ “Voting on Segregationist Referenda.” Public OpinionQuarterly 25 (Spring 1961): 92-105. (P.P.6392.eck)

POLITICAL CONSEQUENCES

BARTLEY, NUMAN V. and HUGH D. GRAHAM. SouthernPolitics and the Second Reconstruction. Baltimore: Johns HopkinsUniversity Press, 1975, 233pp. (X.800/25158)

BALL, HOWARD. Compromise Compliance: Implementation of the1965 Voting Rights Act. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1982.(X.529/66829)

BASS, JACK and WALTER DEVRIES. The Transformation ofSouthern Politics: Social Change and Political Consequences since1945. New York: Basic Books, 1976, 527pp. (X.808/41781)

BLACK, EARL. Southern Governors and Civil Rights: RacialSegregation as a Campaign Issue in the Second Reconstruction.Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1976, 408pp. (X.800/11633)

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BLACK, EARL and MERLE BLACK. Politics and Society in theSouth. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1987, 363pp.(YA.1990.b.3927)

BROOKS, GARY H. and WILLIAM CLAGGETT. “Black ElectoralPower, White Resistance, and Legislative Behaviour.” PoliticalBehaviour 3, no. 1 (1981): 49-68. (DSC: 6543.873000)

BULLOCK, CHARLES S., III. “Congressional Voting and theMobilization of a Black Electorate in the South.” Journal of Politics43 (August 1981): 662-82. (P.P.6392.ecx)

CAMPBELL, DAVID and JOE R. FEAGIN. “Black Politics in theSouth: a Descriptive Analysis.” Journal of Politics 37 (February1975): 129-62. (P.P.6392.ecx)

CARMINES, EDWARD G. and JAMES A. STIMSON. IssueEvolution: Race and the Transformation of American Politics.Princeton; Oxford: Princeton University Press, 1989, 217pp.(YC.1991.b.3879)

COLBY, DAVID C. “Black Power, White Resistance, and PublicPolicy: Political Power and Poverty Program Grants in Mississippi.”Journal of Politics 47, no. 2 (1985): 579-95. (P.P.6392.ecx)

COOMBS, DAVID et al. “Black Political Control in Greene County,Alabama.” Rural Sociology 42, no. 3 (1977): 398-406. (P.P.8004.js)

DAVIDSON, CHANDLER and BERNARD GROFMAN, eds. QuietRevolution in the South: the Impact of the Voting Rights Act, 1965-1990. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1994. (YC.1995.b.3814)

EDDS, MARGARET. Free at Last: What Really Happened whenCivil Rights came to Southern Politics. Bethesda, MD: Adler &Adler, 1987, 277pp. (YA.1989.b.7893)

FEAGIN, JOE R. and HARLAN HAHN. “The SecondReconstruction: Black Political Strength in the South.” SocialScience Quarterly 51 (June 1979): 42-56. (Ac.9234.rx)

FENDRICH, JAMES M. and KENNETH M. LOVOY. “Back to theFuture: Adult Political Behaviour of Former Student Activists.”American Sociological Review 52 (December 1988): 780-84.(Ac.2285/2)

FENDRICH, JAMES M., and ALLISON T. TARLEAU. “Marchingto a Different Drummer: Occupational and Political Correlates ofFormer Student Activists.” Social Forces 53 (December 1973): 245-52. (P.P.8001/fc)

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FOSTER, E. C. “A Time of Challenge: Afro-Mississippi PoliticalDevelopments since 1965.” Journal of Negro History 68 (Spring1983): 185-200. (Ac.8444)

FOSTER, LORN S. “The Voting Rights Act: Black Voting and theNew Southern Politics.” Western Journal of Black Studies 7, no. 3(1983): 120-29. (DSC: 9300.829000)

GREENE, MELISSA FAY. Praying for Sheetrock. London: Secker& Warburg, 1992. (YC.1993.b.4242)

GUYOT, LAWRENCE and MIKE THELWELL. “The Politics ofNecessity and Survival in Mississippi.” Freedomways 6, no. 2(1966): 120-32. (DSC: 4033.362000)

------------ “Toward Independent Political Power.” Freedomways 6,no. 3 (1966): 246-54. (DSC: 4033.362000)

HANKS, LAWRENCE J. The Struggle for Black PoliticalEmpowerment in Three Georgia Counties. Knoxville: University ofTennessee Press, 1987, 227pp. (DSC: 87/28668)

JONES, MACK. “Black Political Officeholding and PoliticalDevelopment in the Rural South.” Review of Black PoliticalEconomy 6 (Summer 1976): 375-407. (DSC: 7788.700000)

KEECH, WILLIAM R. The Impact of Negro Voting: the Role of theVote in the Quest for Equality. Chicago: Rand McNally & Co., 1968,113pp. (X.800/5095)

KLEIN, JOE. “The Emancipation of Bolton, Mississippi.” Esquire,December 1985, pp.258-62. (Cup.701.a.13)

LAWSON, STEVEN F. Black Ballots: Voting Rights in the South,1944-1969. New York; Guildford: Columbia University Press, 1976,474pp. (X.800/16819)

----------- In Pursuit of Power: Southern Blacks and Electoral Politics,1965-1982. New York; Guildford; Columbia University Press, 1985,391pp. (X.800/42176)

------------ Running for Freedom: Civil Rights and Black Politics since1941. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1991.(YA.1991.a.18681)

LEVESQUE, RUSELL J. “White Response to Nonwhite VoterRegistration in the Southern States.” Pacific Sociological Review 15(April 1972): 245-55. (P.P.8004.qr)

McADAM, DOUG . Political Process and the Development of BlackInsurgency, 1930-1970. Chicago; London: University of ChicagoPress, 1982, 304pp. (X.520/30314)

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------------ and KELLY MOORE. “The Politics of Black Insurgency,1930-1975.” In Violence in America: Protest, Rebellion, Reform, 3rded., edited by Ted Robert Gurr, vol. 2, pp.255-85. Newbury Park,CA; London: Sage Publications, 1989. (YC.1990.a.4886)

MARTIN, JOHN F. Civil Rights and the Crisis of Liberalism: theDemocratic Party, 1945-1976. Boulder: Westview Press, 1979,301pp. (X.520/25220)

MORRISON, MINION K. C. Black Political Mobilization:Leadership, Power, and Mass Behaviour. Albany: State University ofNew York Press, 1987, 303pp. (DSC: 87/25903)

------------ and JOE C. HUANG. “The Transfer of Power in aMississippi Town.” Growth and Change 4 (April 1973): 25-29.(DSC: 4223.020000)

MURRAY, PAUL T. “The Struggle for Political Power in a BlackBelt County.” Humanity and Society 12 (August 1988): 239-53.(DSC: 4336.581200)

PARKER, FRANK. R. Black Votes Count: Political Empowermentin Mississippi After 1965. Chapel Hill: University of North CarolinaPress, 1990, 254pp. (DSC: 90/20339)

ROZIER, JOHN. Black Boss: Political Revolution in a GeorgiaCounty. Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1982, 220pp. (DSC:82/15381)

SHRIVER, DONALD W. Forgiveness and Politics: the Case of theAmerican Black Civil Rights Movement. New World, 1987.(YC.1988.a.12224)

STEWART, JOSEPH, Jr. and JAMES F. SHEFFIELD, Jr. “DoesInterest Group Litigation Matter? The Case of Black PoliticalMobilization in Mississippi.” Journal of Politics 49 (August 1987):780-98. (P.P.6392.ecx)

UNITED STATES COMMISSION ON CIVIL RIGHTS. The VotingRights Act: Unfulfilled Goals. Washington, DC: The Commission,1981. (AS.1144/727)

WALTON, HANES, Jr. When the Marching Stopped: the Politics ofCivil Rights Regulatory Agencies. Albany: State University of NewYork Press, 1988, 263pp. (YC.1989.b.394)

WATTERS, PAT. “The Negroes Enter Southern Politics.” Dissent13, no. 4 (1966): 361-68. (P.P.3558.iwa)

WIRT, FREDERICK M. The Politics of Southern Equality: Law andChange in a Mississippi County. Chicago: Aldine Publishing Co.,1971. (X.800/7514)

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SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES

BASS, JACK and WALTER DEVRIES. The Transformation ofSouthern Politics: Social Change and Political Consequences Since1945. New York: Basic Books, 1976, 527pp. (X.808/41781)

BLACK, EARL and MERLE BLACK. Politics and Society in theSouth. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1987, 363pp.(YA.1990.b.3927)

BLACKWELL, JAMES E. “Persistence and Change in IntergroupRelations: the Crisis upon us.” Social Problems 29, no. 4 (1982):325-45. (P.521/945)

BULLOCK, CHARLES, III and CHARLES M. LAMB, eds.Implementation of Civil Rights Policy. Monterey, CA: Brooks/ColePublishing Co., 1984, 223pp. (DSC: 83/36326)

BURMAN, STEPHEN. The Black Progress Question: Explaining theAfrican American Predicament. Thousand Oaks, CA; London: Sage,1995. (YK.1996.a.649)

BUTTON, JAMES W. Blacks and Social Change: Impact of theCivil Rights Movement in Southern Communities. Princeton:Princeton University Press, 1989, 326pp. (YH.1990.b.231)

------------ “The Outcomes of Contemporary Black Protest andViolence.” In Violence in America: Protest, Rebellion, Reform, 3ded., edited by Robert Ted Gurr, vol. 2, pp.286-306. Newburg Park,CA; London: Sage Publications, 1989. (YC.1990.a.4885)

COLBY, DAVID C. “Black Power, White Resistance, and PublicPolicy: Political Power and Poverty Program Grants in Mississippi.”Journal of Politics 47, no. 2 (1985): 579-95. (P.P.6392.ecx)

CRAIN, ROBERT L. The Politics of School Desegregation:Comparative Case Studies of Community Structure and Policy-Making. National Opinion Research Center Monographs in SocialResearch, vol. 14. Chicago: Aldine Publishing Co., 1968, 390pp.(X.529/1975)

FARLEY, REYNOLDS. Blacks and Whites: Narrowing the Gap?Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1984. (X.520/38185)

------------ “Trends in Racial Inequalities: Have the Gains of the 1960sDisappeared in the 1970s?” American Sociological Review 42, no. 2(1977): 189-208. (Ac.2285/2)

FENDRICH, JAMES M. “Keeping the Faith or Pursuing the GoodLife? A Study of the Consequences of Participation in the CivilRights Movement.” American Sociological Review 42, no. 1 (1977):144-57. (Ac.2285/2)

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FENDRICH, JAMES M. and ELLIS S. KRAUSS. “Student Activismand Adult Left-Wing Politics: a Causal Model of PoliticalSocialization for Black, White, and Japanese Students of the 1960’sGeneration.” In Research in Social Movements, Conflict and Change,edited by Lewis Kriesberg, vol. 1, pp.231-55. Greenwich, CT: JAIPress, 1978. (P.521/3594)

FENDRICH, JAMES M. and ALLISON T. TARLEAU. “Marchingto a Different Drummer: Occupational and Political Correlates ofFormer Student Activists.” Social Forces 53 (December 1973): 245-52. (P.P.8001/fc)

JACKSON, MAURICE. “The Civil Rights Movement and SocialChange.” In Social Movements and Social Change, edited by R. L.Lauer, pp.174-89. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press,1976, London: Feffer & Simons. (X.800/26006)

LAUE, JAMES H. “The Movement: Discovering where it’s at andHow to Get it.” In Social Movements and Social Change, edited byRobert H. Lauer, pp.190-96. Carbondale: Southern Illinois UniversityPress, 1976. (X.800/26006)

LOMOTEY, KOFI and CHARLES TEDDLIE, eds. Forty Years afterthe Brown Decision: Implications of School Desegregation for U.S.Education. New York: AMS Press, 1996. (YC.1997.b.280)

MARABLE, MANNING. Race, Reform and Rebellion: the SecondReconstruction in Black America, 1945-1982. Basingstoke:Macmillan Education, 1991. (YC.1991.a.3386)

ROSSELL, CHRISTINE H. and WILLIS D. HAWLEY, eds. TheConsequences of School Desegregation. Philadelphia: TempleUniversity Press, 1983. (X.520/38052)

SANSING, DAVID G. Making Haste Slowly: the Troubled History ofHigher Education in Mississippi. Jackson: University Press ofMississippi, 1990. (YA.1993.b.4855)

SITKOFF, HARVARD. The Struggle for Black Equality, 1954-1980.New York: Hill and Wang, 1981. (X.809/60625)

SWIFT, JEANINE, ed. Dream and Reality: the Modern BlackStruggle for Freedom and Equality. New York; London: GreenwoodPress, 1991. (YC.1992.b.3356)

UNITED STATES COMMISSION ON CIVIL RIGHTS, TEXASADVISORY COMMITTEE. Texas: the State of Civil Rights TenYears Later, 1968-78: A Report. Washington, DC: GPO, 1980.(AS.176/126)

WILLIAMS, JUAN. “Have We Forgotten the Dream?” PublicWelfare 46 (Winter 1988): 35-39. (P.P.8003.zx)

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WIRT, FREDERICK M. The Politics of Southern Equality: Law andChange in a Mississippi County. Chicago: Aldine Publishing Co.,1971. (X.800/7514)

WOLTERS, RAYMOND. The Burden of Brown: Thirty Years ofSchool Desegregation. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press,1984. (YA.1987.b.2479)

ZASHIN, ELLIOT. “The Progress of Black Americans in CivilRights: Two Decades Assessed.” Daedalus 107 (Winter 1978): 239-62. (Ac.1730/2)

MUSIC OF THE MOVEMENT

DUNSON, JOSH. Freedom in the Air: Song Movements of theSixties. New York: International Publishers, 1965, 127pp.(X.439/473)

REAGON, BERNICE JOHNSON. “Let the Church Sing ‘Freedom.’”Black Music Research Journal 7 (1987): 105-18. (DSC:2105.965600)

SANGER, KERRAN L. “When the Spirit Says Sing!”: the Role ofFreedom Songs in the Civil Rights Movement. New York; London:Garland, 1995. (YC.1996.a.1703)

SEEGER, PETE and BOB REISER. Everybody Says Freedom. NewYork: W. W. Norton & Co., 1989, 266pp. (YH.1990.b.460)

SPENCER, JON MICHAEL. “Freedom Songs of the Civil RightsMovement.” Journal of Black Sacred Music 1 (Fall 1987): 1-16.(DSC: 4954.190000)

WARD, Brian. Just My Soul Responding: Rhythm and Blues, BlackConsciousness and Race Relations. London: UCL Press, 1998.(YC.1998.b.3407)