Howard Zinn's Southern Diary: Sit-ins, Civil Rights, and Black Women's Student Activism

Howard Zinn's Southern Diary: Sit-ins, Civil Rights, and Black Women's Student Activism

Howard Zinn's Southern Diary: Sit-ins, Civil Rights, and Black Women's Student Activism

Howard Zinn's Southern Diary: Sit-ins, Civil Rights, and Black Women's Student Activism

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Overview

The activist and author of A People’s History of the United States records an in-depth and personal account of the Civil Rights Movement in Atlanta.
 
During the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s, students of Spelman College, a black liberal arts college for women, were drawn into the historic protests occurring across Atlanta. At the time, Howard Zinn was a history professor at Spelman and served as an adviser to the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. Zinn mentored many of Spelman’s students fighting for civil rights at the time, including Alice Walker and Marian Wright Edelman.
 
Zinn’s involvement with the Atlanta student movement and his closeness to Spelman’s leading activists gave him an insider’s view of the political and intellectual world of Spelman, Atlanta University, and the SNCC. He recorded his many insights and observations of the time in his Spelman College diary.
 
Robert Cohen presents Zinn’s diary in full along with a thorough historical overview and helpful contextual notes. It is a fascinating historical document of the free speech, academic freedom, and student rights battles that rocked Spelman and led to Zinn’s dismissal from the college in 1963 for supporting the student movement.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780820353234
Publisher: University of Georgia Press
Publication date: 10/07/2020
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 309
Sales rank: 954,911
File size: 8 MB

About the Author

ROBERT COHEN is a professor of history and social studies at New York University and is the author of Howard Zinn’s Southern Diary: Sit-ins, Civil Rights, and Black Women’s Student Activism. He lives in New York City.
Alice Walker (b. 1944), one of the United States’ preeminent writers, is an award-winning author of novels, stories, essays, and poetry. In 1983, Walker became the first African-American woman to win a Pulitzer Prize for fiction with her novel The Color Purple, which also won the National Book Award. Her other novels include The Third Life of Grange Copeland, Meridian, The Temple of My Familiar, and Possessing the Secret of Joy. In her public life, Walker has worked to address problems of injustice, inequality, and poverty as an activist, teacher, and public intellectual.
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