Jon N. Hale 
A New Kind of Youth [EPUB ebook] 
Historically Black High Schools and Southern Student Activism, 1920–1975

Soporte
The story of activist youth in America is usually framed around the Vietnam War, the counterculture, and college campuses, focusing primarily on college students in the 1960s and 1970s. But a remarkably effective tradition of Black high school student activism in the civil rights era has gone understudied.



In 1951, students at R. R. Moton High School in rural Virginia led a student walkout and contacted the law firm of Hill, Martin, and Robinson in Richmond, Virginia, to file one of the five pivotal court cases that comprised the
Brown v. Board of Education decision. In 1960, twenty-four Burke High School students in Charleston, South Carolina, organized the first direct action, nonviolent protest in the city at the downtown S. H. Kress department store. Months later in the small town of Mc Comb, Mississippi, an entire high school walked out in protest of the conviction of a student who sat-in on a local Woolworth lunch counter in 1961, guiding the agenda for the historic Freedom Summer campaign of 1964.
A New Kind of Youth brings high school activism into greater focus, illustrating how Black youth supported liberatory social and political movements and inspired their elders across the South.
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Sobre el autor

Jon N. Hale is associate professor of educational history and policy studies at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
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Idioma Inglés ● Formato EPUB ● Páginas 348 ● ISBN 9781469671406 ● Tamaño de archivo 7.9 MB ● Editorial The University of North Carolina Press ● Ciudad Chapel Hill ● País US ● Publicado 2022 ● Descargable 24 meses ● Divisa EUR ● ID 8515170 ● Protección de copia Adobe DRM
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