[For this
year’s MLK week series, I’ll highlight under-remembered figures, histories,
and stories that can expand our collective memories of the Civil Rights
Movement. Leading up to a special weekend post on 21st century
voices!]
Two years ago, I
focused the
second piece for my bimonthly “Considering History” column for the Saturday Evening Post on the African
American women whose anti-sexual assault activism led directly to the 1955 Montgomery
Bus Boycott and a key origin point for the Civil Rights Movement. (A piece
that, as I note there, was indebted to historian Danielle McGuire’s amazing
book At
the Dark End of the Street.) Those histories significantly change and
expand our collective memories of the boycott, of Rosa Parks, of the Civil Rights
Movement, and of the long, 20th
century evolution of what we’ve come to know as the #MeToo movement. For
all those reasons, I would ask you to read
that Saturday Evening Post piece
(and ideally McGuire’s book as well) and help add these women and this activism
into our collective memories!
Next post
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Civil Rights figures, histories, or stories you’d want to add to our collective
memories?
No comments:
Post a Comment