Battling the plantation mentality [electronic resource] : Memphis and the Black freedom struggle / Laurie B. Green.
Material type:
- African Americans -- Civil rights -- Tennessee -- Memphis -- History -- 20th century
- African Americans -- Segregation -- Tennessee -- Memphis -- History -- 20th century
- Civil rights movements -- Tennessee -- Memphis -- History -- 20th century
- African Americans -- Tennessee -- Memphis -- History -- 20th century
- Racism -- Tennessee -- Memphis -- History -- 20th century
- Memphis (Tenn.) -- Race relations -- History -- 20th century
- Memphis (Tenn.) -- History -- 20th century
- 323.1196/0730768190904 22
- F444.M59 N485 2007eb
Includes bibliographical references (p. 359-379) and index.
Migration, memory, and freedom in the urban heart of the Delta -- Memphis before World War II: migrants, mushroom strikes, and the reign of terror -- Where would the Negro women apply for work?: wartime clashes over labor, gender, and racial justice -- Moral outrage: postwar protest against police violence and sexual assault -- Night train, Freedom Train: black youth and racial politics in the early Cold War -- Our mental liberties: banned movies, black-appeal radio, and the struggle for a new public sphere -- Rejecting mammy: the urban-rural road in the era of Brown v. Board of Education -- We were making history: students, sharecroppers, and sanitation workers in the Memphis freedom movement -- Battling the plantation mentality: from the Civil Rights Act to the sanitation strike.
Electronic reproduction. Palo Alto, Calif. : ebrary, 2013. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ebrary affiliated libraries.
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