Brown V. Board: The Landmark Oral Argument Before the Supreme Court
By (Author) Leon Friedman
Introduction by Waldo E. Martin
The New Press
The New Press
24th August 2004
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
348
Hardback
416
Width 162mm, Height 238mm
708g
The transcripts, never before available to the general reading public, of the most important American governmental act of any kind since the Emancipation Proclamation (Louis Pollack, Yale University)
Brown v. Board of Education sparked a revolution in race relations that transformed America's social and political landscape. Argued before the U.S. Supreme Court in 1952 and 1953, the case was a historic encounter between the forces of racial segregation and the burgeoning civil rights movement. The resulting decision, which outlawed segregation in public schools, set the stage for decades of legal and political disputes that have yet to be resolved.
On the occasion of the fiftieth anniversary of the decision, The New Press is publishing the transcripts of the oral arguments before the Supreme Court in the Brown case. Never before available to a general reading audience, the Brown transcripts are among the most revealing documents of contemporary history, with a cast of charactersThurgood Marshall, Hugo Black, and Felix Frankfurterthat includes some of the towering legal and political figures of the past century.
We are convinced that the answer is that any segregation, which is for the purpose of setting up either class or caste legislation, is in and of itself a violation of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Leon Friedman is Joseph Kushner Distinguished Professor of Civil Liberties Law at Hofstra University. Professor Friedman is the author of The Justices of the United States Supreme Court, 1789-1969, and The Supreme Court Confronts Abortion. Waldo E. Martin is Professor of History at the University of California-Berkeley. He is the author of The Mind of Frederick Douglass, Brown v. Board of Education, and Civil Rights in the United States (co-edited with Patricia Sullivan).