Selected as an "Outstanding" University Press Book for Public and Secondary School Libraries.<br /><i>2010 AAUP Bibliography</i>
Selected as an "Outstanding" University Press Book for Public and Secondary School Libraries.<br /><i>2010 AAUP Bibliography</i>
These are deeply moving personal perspectives on the civil rights era, revealing in vivid detail how children across the nation lived out the dilemmas of race in their families, schools, and neighborhoods.<br />--Kip Kosek, American Studies, George Washington University
These are deeply moving personal perspectives on the civil rights era, revealing in vivid detail how children across the nation lived out the dilemmas of race in their families, schools, and neighborhoods.<br />--Kip Kosek, American Studies, George Washington University
...everyone should read this fascinating anthology.<br />--<i>Kansas History</i>
...everyone should read this fascinating anthology.<br />--<i>Kansas History</i>
Produktdetaljer
Biografisk notat
Mildred Wigfall Robinson was in the fourth grade in Moncks Corner, South Carolina, when Brown v. Board was decided. She received her elementary and secondary education in the state's schools, which remained segregated, then graduated from Fisk University. She is Henry L. & Grace Doherty Charitable Foundation Professor, University of Virginia School of Law.Richard J. Bonnie was in the eighth grade in Norfolk, Virginia, when the public schools were closed to resist the Supreme Court's decision in Brown. He is Harrison Foundation Professor of Medicine and Law, Hunton & Williams Research Professor, and Director, Institute of Law, Psychiatry & Public Policy at the University of Virginia.