TY - BOOK AU - Capshaw,Katharine TI - Civil rights childhood: picturing liberation in African American photobooks AV - E185.615 .C315 2014eb U1 - 323.1196/073009045 23 PY - 2014///] CY - Minneapolis PB - University of Minnesota Press KW - African Americans KW - Civil rights KW - History KW - 20th century KW - Civil rights movements KW - United States KW - Social justice KW - African American children KW - Social conditions KW - Pictorial works KW - Picture books KW - Social aspects KW - Photography KW - Art and social action KW - African American arts KW - Influence KW - Race relations KW - Electronic books N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; Friendship, Sympathy, Social Change -- Pictures and Nonfiction : Conduct and Coffee Tables -- Today : Framing Freedom in Mississippi -- The Black Arts Movement : Childhood as Liberatory Process -- Blurring the Childhood Image : Representations of the Civil Rights Narrative -- Conclusion: A Text for Trayvon N2 - "Childhood joy, pleasure, and creativity are not often associated with the civil rights movement. Their ties to the movement may have faded from historical memory, but these qualities received considerable photographic attention in that tumultuous era. Katharine Capshaw's Civil Rights Childhood reveals how the Black child has been--and continues to be--a social agent that demands change. Because children carry a compelling aura of human value and potential, images of African American children in the wake of Brown v. Board of Education had a powerful effect on the fight for civil rights. In the iconography of Emmett Till and the girls murdered in the 1963 Birmingham church bombings, Capshaw explores the function of children's photographic books and the image of the Black child in social justice campaigns for school integration and the civil rights movement. Drawing on works ranging from documentary photography, coffee-table and art books, and popular historical narratives and photographic picture books for the very young, Civil Rights Childhood sheds new light on images of the child and family that portrayed liberatory models of Blackness, but it also considers the role photographs played in the desire for consensus and closure with the rise of multiculturalism. Offering rich analysis, Capshaw recovers many obscure texts and photographs while at the same time placing major names like Langston Hughes, June Jordan, and Toni Morrison in dialogue with lesser-known writers. An important addition to thinking about representation and politics, Civil Rights Childhood ultimately shows how the photobook--and the aspirations of childhood itself--encourage cultural transformation"-- UR - http://site.ebrary.com/lib/daystar/Doc?id=10985911 ER -