African American women civil rights workers -- Biography
Label
African American women civil rights workers -- Biography
Name
African American women civil rights workers
Sub focus
Actions
Incoming Resources
- Subject of49
- Power hungry, women of the Black Panther Party and Freedom Summer and their fight to feed a movement, Suzanne Cope
- Maya Angelou, her phenomenal life & poetic journey, from the editors of Essence
- Soon we will not cry, the liberation of Ruby Doris Smith Robinson, Cynthia Griggs Fleming
- Open wide the freedom gates, a memoir, Dorothy Height ; with a foreword by Maya Angelou
- Ida B. Wells, mother of the civil rights movement, Dennis Brindell Fradin and Judith Bloom Fradin
- Ida B. Wells, a passion for justice, William Greaves Productions, Inc. for the American Experience ; writer, William Greaves ; producers, William Greaves, Louise Archambault
- Thyra J. Edwards, black activist in the global freedom struggle, Gregg Andrews
- Until I am free, Fannie Lou Hamer's enduring message to America, Keisha N. Blain
- Ida B. Wells-Barnett, crusader against lynching, Elaine Slivinski Lisandrelli
- Coretta Scott King, civil rights activist, Lisa Renee Rhodes ; with additional text written by Dale Evva Gelfand ; consulting editor, revised edition, Heather Lehr Wagner ; senior consulting editor, first edition, Nathan Irvin Huggins
- Freedom's child, the life of a Confederate general's Black daughter, Carrie Allen McCray
- Black woman reformer, Ida B. Wells, lynching, & transatlantic activism, Sarah L. Silkey
- Desert rose, the life and legacy of Coretta Scott King, Edythe Scott Bagley with Joe Hilley ; afterword by Bernice A. King
- Ella Baker and the Black freedom movement, a radical democratic vision, Barbara Ransby
- They say, Ida B. Wells and the reconstruction of race, James West Davidson
- Ida B. Wells-Barnett and American reform, 1880-1930, Patricia A. Schechter
- To keep the waters troubled, the life of Ida B. Wells, Linda O. McMurry
- Parallel worlds, the remarkable Gibbs-Hunts and the enduring (in)significance of melanin, Adele Logan Alexander
- Sisters in the struggle, African American women in the civil rights-black power movement, edited by Bettye Collier-Thomas and V.P. Franklin
- The struggle is eternal, Gloria Richardson and black liberation, Joseph R. Fitzgerald
- The firebrand and the First Lady, portrait of a friendship : Pauli Murray, Eleanor Roosevelt, and the struggle for social justice, Patricia Bell-Scott
- Love, activism, and the respectable life of Alice Dunbar-Nelson, Tara T. Green
- Ella Baker and the Black freedom movement, a radical democratic vision, Barbara Ransby
- Looking for Lorraine, the radiant and radical life of Lorraine Hansberry, Imani Perry
- Hands on the freedom plow, personal accounts by women in SNCC, edited by Faith S. Holsaert ... [et at.]
- Looking for Lorraine, The Radiant and Radical Life of Lorraine Hansberry, by Imani Perry
- Coretta Scott King, a biography, Laura T. McCarty
- Looking for Lorraine, the radiant and radical life of Lorraine Hansberry, Imani Perry
- Fannie Lou Hamer, the life of a civil rights icon, Earnest N. Bracey
- Until I am free, Fannie Lou Hamer's enduring message to America, Keisha N. Blain
- A song flung up to heaven, Maya Angelou
- The firebrand and the First Lady, portrait of a friendship : Pauli Murray, Eleanor Roosevelt, and the struggle for social justice, Patricia Bell-Scott
- Just another southern town, Mary Church Terrell and the struggle for racial justice in the nation's capital, Joan Quigley
- This little light of mine, the life of Fannie Lou Hamer, Kay Mills ; with a foreword by Marian Wright Edelman
- Women and the civil rights movement, 1954-1965, edited by Davis W. Houck and David E. Dixon
- For freedom's sake, the life of Fannie Lou Hamer, Chana Kai Lee
- To tell the truth freely, the life of Ida B. Wells, Mia Bay
- Until there is justice, the life of Anna Arnold Hedgeman, Jennifer Scanlon
- All is never said, the narrative of Odette Harper Hines, Judith Rollins
- A voice that could stir an army, Fannie Lou Hamer and the rhetoric of the Black freedom movement, Maegan Parker Brooks
- A song flung up to heaven, by Maya Angelou
- Ella Baker, community organizer of the civil rights movement, J. Todd Moye
- Look to the light sisters, Marian Olivia Heath Griffin
- If your back's not bent, the role of the Citizenship Education Program in the civil rights movement, Dorothy F. Cotton
- Lift every voice, turning a civil rights setback into a new vision of social justice, Lani Guinier
- A forgotten sisterhood, pioneering Black women educators and activists in the Jim Crow South, Audrey Thomas McCluskey
Outgoing Resources
- Focus1
- Sub focus1