On the book that
takes us back to one of the most complex and inspiring American summers.
One of the topics
that came up a good deal in my just-completed English Studies Capstone course (about
which I wrote last Thursday) was the coming summer, and how the students might
be able to use it to move into or toward different careers, interests,
passions, next steps of one kind or another. As you might expect in our current
world and economy, work is a key component for these students—even those who
were considering unpaid internships had to figure out how to balance them with
compensated employment as well. But nonetheless, I consistently made the case
that they need to consider not only what they need but also what they want, and
what can inspire them—and one great model for the latter would be 1964’s Freedom
Summer.
Of the more than
1000 volunteers who traveled to Mississippi that June to help register African
American voters, the three
who were murdered in the first ten days are by far the most famous (and
rightly so). Yet I would argue that many of the experiences of the other
volunteers were just as extreme and lasting, if of course in less tragic and
more evolving and inspiring ways—and I know that because of Doug
McAdam’s pioneering and compelling Freedom
Summer (1990). McAdam balances interviews with former volunteers and
sociological analyses of their community and experiences with historical
contexts and sweep; his book is as much about the afterlives of the volunteers
(most of which do not at all fit the stereotypical ex-hippie-turned-yuppie
narrative) as about their 1964 experiences, making it a history of late 20th
century America on multiple, interconnected fronts.
That combination
of depth and breadth makes it a significant AmericanStudies text, but the book
is also a great beach read for two additional reasons. For one thing, it’s a
page-turner—we may know what happened with the Civil Rights Movement in general
post-1964, but we don’t know much about these individual lives and identities,
nor those of the communities with which they were engaged in that summer; and
McAdam makes sure that we care a great deal about what happens to them. And to
come back to my initial point, it’s also hugely inspiring, makes you want to
get out of that hammock and do something to make the world a better place. Can’t
think of a better cure for any potential summertime blues than that!
Next beach read
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. Nominations
for AmericanStudies beach reads? Share ‘em please!
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