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Book cover of Dissent in Wichita: The Civil Rights Movement in the Midwest, 1954-72
United States History - African American History, African American History, African American Biography & Memoir, Ethnic & Race Relations, Civil & Human Rights, United States History - 20th Century - 1945 to 2000, African American Biography

Dissent in Wichita: The Civil Rights Movement in the Midwest, 1954-72

by Gretchen Cassel Eick
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Overview

On a hot summer evening in 1958, a group of African American students in Wichita, Kansas, quietly entered Dockum's Drug Store and sat down at the whites-only lunch counter. This was the beginning of the first sustained, successful student sit-in of the modern civil rights movement, instigated in violation of the national NAACP's instructions. Based on interviews with over eighty participants and observers of this sit-in, Dissent in Wichita traces the contours of race relations and black activism in an unexpected locus of the civil rights movement, revealing that the movement was a national, not a southern, phenomenon.

Synopsis

Winner of the Richard L. Wentworth Prize in American History, Byron Caldwell Smith Book Prize, and the William Rockhill Nelson Award

About the Author, Gretchen Cassel Eick

Gretchen Cassel Eick, a professor of history at Friends University, Wichita, has received two Fulbright grants and was for ten years a professional lobbyist in Washington, D.C.

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Book Details

Published
September 1, 2007
Publisher
University of Illinois Press
Pages
344
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780252074912

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