Inside Agitators: White Southerners in the Civil Rights Movement

Front Cover
JHU Press, Apr 22, 1996 - History - 336 pages

Winner of the Outstanding Book on the Subject of Human Rights in North America Award from the Gustavus Myers Center

"In the movement, we always said that, like in a washing machine, it was the agitator that got the dirt out. David Chappell's book shows how the inside agitators helped cleanse the society of an extreme injustice. It is an enlightening and important look at a less publicized part of this history." -Andrew Young

"A superb study done with subtlety and keen insight, it is absolutely essential for understanding the vital role white Southerners played in the civil rights movement." -C. Vann Woodward, Yale University

"Chappell's argument is insightful and worth serious attention. It makes particularly fascinating reading from the perspective of the 1990s." -David R. Colburn, Reviews in American History

"In this engaging work on Southern whites who sympathized with the Civil Rights Movement, Chappell argues that moderate whites, though lacking a moral commitment to civil rights, played a key role in the movement's success at both the local and national levels." -Virginia Quarterly Review

 

Contents

Part One The Strange Career of Racial Dissent in the South
1
Gets Organized
25
Part Two The Strategy of Nonviolence and the Role of White
51
The White Southerner
145
an Intermission
169
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About the author (1996)

David Chappell teaches history at the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville.

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