A COLLECTION AND EXAMINATION OF THE CREATIVE LITERARY WORK OF FREEDOM STUDENTS DISCOVERING PATHWAYS TO RACIAL JUSTICEFifty years after Freedom Summer To Write in the Light of Freedom offers a glimpse into the hearts of the African American youths who attended the Mississippi Freedom Schools in 1964. One of the most successful initiatives of Freedom Summer more than forty Freedom Schools opened doors to thousands of young African American students. Here they learned civics politics and history curricula that helped them see beyond the degrading lessons supporting segregation and Jim Crow and sanctioned by White Citizen's Councils. Young people enhanced their self-esteem and gained a new outlook on the future. And at more than a dozen of these schools students wrote edited printed and published their own newspapers. For more than five decades the Mississippi Freedom Schools have served as powerful models of educational activism. Yet little has been published that documents black Mississippi youths' responses to this profound experience.For the first time the sincere words thoughts and dreams of the original students are published here in a powerful documentary collection. This edited volume contains hundreds of newspaper articles written by those black youths who yearned to gain knowledge and pursue greater levels of freedom. The homegrown newspapers from the many schools contain a variety of poems stories essays and testimonies that yield raw honest reactions to Freedom Schools to the civil rights movement and to life under Jim Crow. Together these transcribed newspaper pieces recover the inspiring voices of Freedom School students and offer a unique vision of how everyday youth responded to the clarion call of the civil rights movement.William Sturkey Chapel Hill North Carolina is a postdoctoral fellow in the Department of History at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. His work has appeared in the Journal of Mississippi History and the Journal of African American History. Jon N. Hale Charleston South Carolina is an assistant professor at the College of Charleston in South Carolina. His work has appeared in the Journal of African American History History of Education Quarterly South Carolina Historical Magazine and Journal of Social Studies Research.
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