Skip to product information
1 of 1

Peter Lang Inc., International Academic Publishers

Southern Hospitality: Identity, Schools, and the Civil Rights Movement in Mississippi, 1964-1972

Southern Hospitality: Identity, Schools, and the Civil Rights Movement in Mississippi, 1964-1972

Regular price $29.95 USD
Regular price Sale price $29.95 USD
Sale Sold out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Quantity
In Southern Hospitality, an ethnography of Holly Springs, Mississippi (1964-1972), schools play an important part in the formation of black identity during desegregation in the South. The civil rights movement left a leadership void as the public space of black leaders – the segregated schools – disappeared as did the identification with the «Southern Negro» collective of the segregated South. This transformation occurs against the backdrop of the psychological struggle between the individual’s role as a member of that black collective, and the opportunity, secured from the federal government, to advance and integrate into the larger society, thereby fulfilling the «American Dream». Federal change agents did not foresee the erosion of black power and the resegregation of the public schools as whites left the neglected public schools for white academies.
View full details