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The Civil Rights Movement Steven Kasher

The Civil Rights Movement par Steven Kasher

The Civil Rights Movement Steven Kasher


€28.00
État - Très bon état
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Résumé

The first book to tell the story of the civil rights movement through the rousing and often wrenching photographs that recorded, promoted, and protected it.

The Civil Rights Movement Résumé

The Civil Rights Movement: A Photographic History, 1954-68 Steven Kasher

With a striking selection of images and a lively, informative text, Steven Kasher captures the danger, drama, and bravery of the civil rights movement. After an introduction explaining the significance of photography to the movement, the text in this important book proceeds from the Montgomery bus boycott through the student, local and national movements; the big marches; Freedom summer; Malcolm X; and the death of Martin Luther King.

Each chapter begins with a fast-paced narrative of a crucial event in the movement, complemented by a portfolio of the most effective and evocative photographs of the subject. Ranging from the well-known to the rare, these images were shot by such photographers as Richard Avedon, Danny Lyon, Charles Moore, Gordon Parks, Dan Weiner, and more than 50 others. Many of the pictures are accompanied by thought-provoking remembrances and analysis by various photographers and participants.

The Civil Rights Movement Avis

Praise for The Civil Rights Movement: The images...hold a mirror up to Americans, white and black, and what they show us is both terrifying and profound. We were so bad and we were so good; it makes you sad, and it makes you proud. -- Chicago Tribune This book, which collects some 150 black-and-white photos, is indeed a history, offering many lesser-known images that also resonate. See...a bespectacled Elizabeth Eckford, one of the Little Rock Nine, walk stoically ahead of jeering white students; Julian Bond pose with fellow SNCC volunteers, seemingly too young to help change history; and a Mississippi-delta organizing house that has painted the word Freedom on a cross burned by the Klan. Kasher's chapter introductions are lucid overviews of the movement, while the captions--some of which reproduce the original, stilted wire-service captions--are also effective and informative. A moving tribute. -- Publisher's Weekly

À propos de Steven Kasher

Steven Kasher, who lives in Manhattan, is a photographer, writer, and curator. He organized the traveling exhibition Appeal to This Age: Photography of the Civil Rights Movement, 1954-1968. Myrlie Evers-Williams is past chairwoman of the NAACP and widow of the civil rights activist Medgar Evers.

Sommaire

Table of Contents from: The Civil Rights Movement Foreword by Myrlie Evers-Williams Introduction: Imprisoned in a Luminous Glare The Montgomery Bus Boycott, 1955: My Soul Is Rested Little Rock Central High, 1957, and the University of Mississippi, 1962: Don't Let Them See You Cry Sit-ins and Freedom Rides, 1960--62: This Was the Answer The Birmingham Movement, 1963: I Don't Mind Being Bitten by a Dog The March on Washington, 1963: We Stood on a Height SNCC and Mississippi, 1960--64: A Tremor in the Middle of the Iceberg Selma, 1965: We Must Go to Montgomery and See the King Black Power and the March Against Fear, 1966: The Oppressed Against the Oppressor The Eclipsing of Nonviolence, 1965--68: It Is Not Over Notes and Sources Chronology of the Civil Rights Movement, 1954--68 Acknowledgments Selected Bibliography Index

Informations supplémentaires

GOR003649810
9780789206565
0789206560
The Civil Rights Movement: A Photographic History, 1954-68 Steven Kasher
Occasion - Très bon état
Broché
Abbeville Press Inc.,U.S.
19960919
256
N/A
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