CORE

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  • NEGRO PROTEST THOUGHT IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY. by Broderick, Francis L. & August Meier, editors.
    Broderick, Francis L. & August Meier, editors.
    NEGRO PROTEST THOUGHT IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY.

    Edition: First printing.

    Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, (1965.) dj. Hardcover first edition - Anthology of original source documents compiled from the writings of African-American activists from 1895 through 1965, including Monroe Trotter, Bayard Rustin, W.E.B. DuBois, A. Philip Randolph, Marcus Garvey, Angelo Herndon, Dr. Martin Luther King, Thurgood Marshall, John Lewis, and many others. Information on the founding and aims of the various protest movements: The Niagara Movement, NAACP, CORE, SNCC, SCLC, etc. The first book publication of some of the documents. A title in The American Heritage Series under the general editorship of Leonard W. Levy and Alfred Young. Index. xliii, 444 pp.

    Condition: Very near fine in a fair only dustjacket. with chips on the top of the spine and the back cover (previous owner's name mostly hidden by dj flap)

    Book ID: 84116
    View cart More details Price: $24.50
  • AND WE ARE NOT SAVED: A History of the Movement as People. by Louis, Debbie (1944?
    Louis, Debbie (1944?
    AND WE ARE NOT SAVED: A History of the Movement as People.

    Edition: First printing.

    Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1970. dj. SIGNED hardcover first edition - Both a history and critique of the Civil Rights Movement by one of its younger members (the rear panel mentions that Louis's activist work began when she was only 14, and she was just 24 at time of publication), this presents a subjective, insider's view of the Civil Rights Movement, focusing on the experiences and dynamics of the activists themselves. It covers the summer of 1963 with its police repression and violence as a key turning point, gives an overview of organizations like organizations like the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) and CORE, and attribute the decline in the movement to fights among the various factions, the Watts…

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    Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1970. dj. SIGNED hardcover first edition - Both a history and critique of the Civil Rights Movement by one of its younger members (the rear panel mentions that Louis's activist work began when she was only 14, and she was just 24 at time of publication), this presents a subjective, insider's view of the Civil Rights Movement, focusing on the experiences and dynamics of the activists themselves. It covers the summer of 1963 with its police repression and violence as a key turning point, gives an overview of organizations like organizations like the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) and CORE, and attribute the decline in the movement to fights among the various factions, the Watts riots and the rise of the Black Power movement, and the anti-poverty programs. Illustrated with photographs. INSCRIBED on the front endpaper "for Sylvia without whom..." and dated in the year of publication (Sylvia Miller is cited in the acknowledgments as one of those who gave her advice and encouragement). Also includes several appendices - including one which is an in-depth analysis of the 1965 Civil Rights Act, another on CORE's rules, a bibliography and more. In addition to being an activist and an author, Louis was a collector of material about the Civil Rights movement and in 1971 she donated her extensive collection to UCLA. xi, 462 pp.

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    Condition: Near fine in black boards (corners and lower edge of rear board bumped, other minor wear) in a very good dustjacket with some creasing at base of dj spine, bottom edge of rear cover) but uncommon in hardcover and in dj and scarce signed.

    Book ID: 84647
    View cart More details Price: $400.00