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Mississippi Witness The Photographs Of Florence Mars 1st James T Campbell

  • SKU: BELL-36654056
Mississippi Witness The Photographs Of Florence Mars 1st James T Campbell
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Mississippi Witness The Photographs Of Florence Mars 1st James T Campbell instant download after payment.

Publisher: Univ. Press of Mississippi
File Extension: EPUB
File size: 45.63 MB
Pages: 176
Author: James T. Campbell, Elaine Owens
ISBN: 9781496820907, 9781496820914, 1496820908, 1496820916
Language: English
Year: 2019
Edition: 1st

Product desciption

Mississippi Witness The Photographs Of Florence Mars 1st James T Campbell by James T. Campbell, Elaine Owens 9781496820907, 9781496820914, 1496820908, 1496820916 instant download after payment.

In June 1964, Neshoba County, Mississippi, provided the setting for one of the most notorious crimes of the civil rights era: the Klan-orchestrated murder of three young voting-rights workers, James Chaney, Michael Schwerner, and Andrew Goodman.
Captured on the road between the towns of Philadelphia and Meridian, the three were driven to a remote country crossroads, shot, and buried in an earthen dam, from which their bodies were recovered after a forty-four-day search.
The crime transfixed the nation. As federal investigators and an aroused national press corps descended on Neshoba County, white Mississippians closed ranks, dismissing the men's disappearance as a "hoax" perpetrated by civil rights activists to pave the way for a federal "invasion" of the state.
In this climate of furious conformity, only a handful of white Mississippians spoke out. Few did so more openly or courageously than Florence Mars. A fourth-generation Neshoban, Mars braved social ostracism and threats of violence to denounce the murders and decry the climate of fear and intimidation that had overtaken her community.
She later recounted her experiences in Witness in Philadelphia, one of the classic memoirs of the civil rights era. Though few remember today, Mars was also a photographer. Shocked by the ferocity of white Mississippians' reaction to the Supreme Court's 1954 ruling against racial segregation, she bought a camera, built a homemade darkroom, and began to take pictures, determined to document a racial order she knew was dying.
Mississippi Witness features over one hundred of these photographs, most taken in the decade between 1954 and 1964, almost all published here for the first time.
While a few depict public events--Mars photographed the 1955 trial of the murderers of Emmett Till--most feature private moments, illuminating the separate and unequal worlds of black and white Mississippians in the final days of Jim Crow.
Powerful and evocative, the photographs in Mississippi…

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