Let Freedom Ring: A Documentary History of the Modern Civil Rights Movement
By (Author) Peter B. Levy
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th March 1992
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Ethnic studies
Social discrimination and social justice
Social and cultural history
Racism and racial discrimination / Anti-racism
323.1
Paperback
296
This book traces the story of the civil rights movement through the written and spoken words of those who participated in it. It includes both classic texts, such as Martin Luther King, Jr.'s "I Have a Dream" speech and his "Letter from Birmingham Jail", and lesser-known works, such as Robert Moses' "Letter from a Mississippi Jail Cell" and James Lawson's address to SNCC's 1960 founding meeting. Drawing on research by recent scholars, the volume emphasizes the role that ordinary people played in the struggle for freedom and equality and also displays the breadth of the civil rights movement. It contains documents written by members of all the well-known civil rights organizations: SCLC, NAACP, SNCC, CORE, and the Black Panther Party. It includes pieces written by independent and relatively unknown figures, such as Jo Ann Gibson Robinson and Sheyann Webb. In addition, it includes documents demonstrating the ferocity of white resistance to black equality, such as George Wallace's 1963 "Inaugural Address". The book aims to fill a void, providing a balanced single-volume reader on the civil rights movement. It may be valuable to all those interested in Afro-American history, race relations, the 1960s, and recent American history.
Historian Levy has collected and organized 95 documents covering the African-American civil rights movement from the early 1940s through the 1980s, concluding with a very helpful statistical appendix. He has mined a variety of sources, including speeches, sermons, essays, court cases, affidavits, memoirs, and commission reports. The book contains the words of the mighty--Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, et al.--but also the testimony of the less famous, the field workers and foot soldiers of the movement. (With few exceptions, African Americans rather than their white allies are features.) Although the collection emphasizes progress, it also recognizes continuing economic inequities. Broader in coverage and types of sources than Howell Raines's My Soul Is Rested (LJ 9/1/77), this is a readable, valuable collection. Highly recommended as supplemental reading in appropriate courses and for most libraries. * Library Journal *
PETER B. LEVY is an assistant professor of history at York College in Pennsylvania. He is the author of The New Left and Labor in America, 1960-1972 .