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Remembering Brown at Fifty

Remembering Brown at Fifty

The University of Illinois Commemorates Brown v. Board of Education

Edited by Orville Vernon Burton and David O'Brien

Contributions by Kal Alston, Margaret L. Andersen, Kathryn H. Anthony, Nathaniel C Banks, Bernice McNair Barnett, Christopher Benson, Ed Blankenheim, Julian Bond, Orville Vernon Burton, Jason Chambers, Constance Curry, Joseph A. De Laine, Mary L. Dudziak, Joe Feagin, John Hope Franklin, Ophelia De Laine Gona, Lani Guinier, Darlene Clark Hine, Freeman A. Hrabowski, John Jennings, Ralph Lemon, George Lipsitz, Jim Loewen, Laughlin McDonald, David O'Brien, James C. Onderdonk, Sekou Sundiata, Christopher Teal, Nicholas Watkins, Carrie Mae Weems, Juan Williams and Joy Ann WIlliamson

Published by: University of Illinois Press

Imprint: University of Illinois Press

9 color photographs, 21 black & white photographs, 9 charts, 1 table

  • Digital download
  • 9780252053962
  • Published: August 2022
  • Description
  • Contents
  • Authors
  • Praise

Inspired by the University of Illinois's celebration of the Brown v. Board of Education decision's fiftieth anniversary, this collection addresses the significance of Brown in the contributors' lives or work in education and civil rights. Several authors describe their personal roles in the Brown case or similar cases, while others examine and illustrate events, performances, and exhibitions that were part of the anniversary commemoration. The book not only explores the repercussions of the Brown decision, but also stands as a historic document in its own right, preserving the reactions of many prominent intellectuals, artists, and activists fifty years after the decision.
 
Contributors are Kal Alston, Margaret L. Andersen, Kathryn H. Anthony, Nathaniel C. Banks, Bernice McNair Barnett, Christopher Benson, Ed Blankenheim, Julian Bond, Orville Vernon Burton, Jason Chambers, Constance Curry, Joseph A. De Laine Jr., Mary L. Dudziak, Joe R. Feagin, John Hope Franklin, Ophelia De Laine Gona, Lani Guinier, Darlene Clark Hine, Freeman A. Hrabowski III, John Jennings, Ralph Lemon, George Lipsitz, Jim Loewen, Laughlin McDonald, David O'Brien, James C. Onderdonk, Sekou Sundiata, Christopher Teal, Nicholas Watkins, Carrie Mae Weems, Juan Williams, and Joy Ann Williamson.

Acknowledgments
Introduction
Orville Vernon Burton and David O'Brien

SECTION 1: BROWN: ITS HISTORY AND LEGACY
1. Darlene Clark Hine
The Briggs v. Elliott Legacy: Black Culture, Consciousness, and Community before Brown, 1930-1954
2. George Lipsitz
Getting Around Brown: The Social Warrant of the New Racism
3. Margaret L. Andersen
From Brown to Grutter: The Diverse Beneficiaries of Brown v. Board of Education
4. Laughlin McDonald
Beyond School Desegregation: The Impact of Brown
5. Jason Chambers
"A Mind Is a Terrible Thing to Waste": The Advertising Council, the United Negro College Fund, and Educational Access for African Americans
6. Joe R. Feagin and Bernice McNair Barnett
Success and Failure: How Systemic Racism Trumped the Brown v. Board of Education Decision
7. Lani Guinier
From Racial Liberalism to Racial Literacy: Brown v. Board of Education and the Interest-Divergence Dilemma

SECTION 2: BROWN AND LIVED EXPERIENCE
8. Joseph A. De Laine Jr.
Briggs: South Carolina's Bold Step That Led to Brown
9. Ophelia De Laine Gona
About Integration: In Memory of the Reverend J. A. De Laine
10. John Hope Franklin
My Life and Times with Thurgood Marshall
11. Constance Curry
The Intolerable Burden
12. James C. Onderdonk
The Freedom Riders: Two Personal Perspectives
13. Ed Blankenheim
Looking Back at the Freedom Riders
14. Kal Alston
The Middle Generation after Brown

SECTION 3: THE ARTS AND BROWN
15. Sekou Sundiata
Why Colored Faces in High Places Just Won't Do
16. John Jennings
The Chance Project
17. Ralph Lemon
What Was Always There
18. Carrie Mae Weems and David O'Brien
Art and Integration: An Interview with Carrie Mae Weems
19. David O'Brien
Social Studies: Eight Artists Address Brown

SECTION 4: ILLINOIS AND BROWN
20. Kathryn H. Anthony and Nicholas Watkins
A Legacy of Firsts: African Americans in Architecture at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
21. Nathaniel C. Banks
Reflections on the Brown Commemoration from a Champaign Native
22. Joy Ann Williamson Lott
Reform in the Black Power Era
23. Richard Herman
Lest We Forget
24. James W. Loewen
Enforcing Brown in Sundown Towns

SECTION 5: PUBLIC INTELLECTUALS AND BROWN AND ITS LEGACY
25. Julian Bond
Civil Rights: Now and Then
26. Freeman A Hrabowski III
Reflections on America's Academic Achievement Gap: A Fifty-Year Persepctive
27. Christopher Benson
Just Because of the Color of His Skin: The 1955 Lynching of Emmett Till
28. Juan Williams and Christopher Teal
Thurgood Marshall's Vision
Epilogue

Mary L. Dudziak
Brown's Global Impact

Notes on Contributors
Index

Orville Vernon Burton is Burroughs Distinguished Chair of Southern History and Culture at Coastal Carolina University and the author of The Age of Lincoln and other works. David O'Brien is an associate professor of art history at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and the author of After the Revolution: Antoine-Jean Gros, Painting, and Propaganda under Napoleon.

"Provides wonderful insights . . . and should inspire others to continue the struggle to achieve educational equality in the United States."--The Journal of African American History




"Reveals that Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka was a major victory in the struggle for social justice and justifiably deserving of much celebration."--H-Net Reviews


"A valuable book that serves as both a fitting tribute and a careful examination of the Brown v. Board of Education decision after a half century. The touching and moving recollections help us understand the human impact the Brown case had on the 'ordinary' folks."--William C. Hine, coauthor of The African-American Odyssey

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