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A Church, a School: Pulitzer Prize-Winning Civil Rights Editorials from the Atlanta Constitution
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A Church, a School: Pulitzer Prize-Winning Civil Rights Editorials from the Atlanta Constitution
Current price: $18.99
Barnes and Noble
A Church, a School: Pulitzer Prize-Winning Civil Rights Editorials from the Atlanta Constitution
Current price: $18.99
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Ralph McGill (1898-1969) was the editor in chief of the
Atlanta Constitution
during the turbulent years of the civil rights movement that followed
Brown v. Board of Education,
and he became an outspoken advocate for integration and racial tolerance in the South. In this Southern Classics edition, Angie Maxwell offers a new critical introduction that analyzes McGill's as an activist and advocate for social change.The editorials that compose
A Church, a School
marked McGill's emergence as a prolific advocate of nonviolence and social responsibility and evidenced the progressive values of the
Constitution.
contains twenty-nine editorials that elucidate the historical record of liberal Southern participation in the civil rights movement. This is not a record of what happened in the South in the late 1950s; rather it is a map of the intellectual and psychological terrain that liberal journalists, such as McGill, traveled and the obstacles they encountered.
Atlanta Constitution
during the turbulent years of the civil rights movement that followed
Brown v. Board of Education,
and he became an outspoken advocate for integration and racial tolerance in the South. In this Southern Classics edition, Angie Maxwell offers a new critical introduction that analyzes McGill's as an activist and advocate for social change.The editorials that compose
A Church, a School
marked McGill's emergence as a prolific advocate of nonviolence and social responsibility and evidenced the progressive values of the
Constitution.
contains twenty-nine editorials that elucidate the historical record of liberal Southern participation in the civil rights movement. This is not a record of what happened in the South in the late 1950s; rather it is a map of the intellectual and psychological terrain that liberal journalists, such as McGill, traveled and the obstacles they encountered.