Ella Baker and the Black freedom movement : a radical democratic vision /
Saved in:
Table of Contents:
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1.. Now, Who Are Your People?: Norfolk, Virginia, and Littleton, North Carolina, 1903-1918
- 2.. A Reluctant Rebel and an Exceptional Student: Show Academy and Shaw University, 1918-1927
- 3.. Harlem during the 1930s: The Making of a Black Radical ACtivist and Intellectual
- 4.. Fighting Her Own Wars: The NAACP National Office, 1940-1946
- 5.. Cops, Schools, and Communism: Local Politics and Global Ideologies--New York City in the 1950s
- 6.. The Preacher and the Organizer: The Politics of Leadership in the Early Civil Rights Movement
- 7.. New Battlefields and New Allies: Shreveport, Birmingham, and the Southern Conference Education Fund
- 8.. Mentoring a New Generation of Activists: The Birth of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, 1960-1961
- 9.. The Empowerment of an Indigenous Southern Black Leadership, 1961-1964
- 10.. Mississippi Goddamn: Fighting for Freedom in the Belly of the Beast of Southern Racism
- 11.. The Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party and the Radical Campaigns of the 1960s and 1970s
- 12.. A Freirian Teacher, a Gramscian Intellectual, and a Radical Humanist: Ella Baker's Legacy
- Appendix. Ella Baker's Organizational Affiliations, 1927-1986
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index