The Story Behind an Unsung Event in the Civil Rights Movement

“Over eight days, eight students sparked change that defined their lives, changed an institution and fueled a movement that continues today.” ─Alberto Ibargüen, President and CEO of the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation and former publisher of The Miami Herald and El Nuevo Herald

#1 New Release in 1960s History of the U.S. and 2020 Finalist Sarton Women's Literary Award for Nonfiction with Special Recognition

Fighting injustice and racism. This narrative tells the story of seven women and one man at the heart of a black power sit-in protesting decreased enrollment and hiring of African Americans at Swarthmore College, and demanding an African American Studies curriculum. The book, written by the former students themselves, includes autobiographical chapters providing a view into the lives of young people during the Civil Rights era.

Correcting media representation. For years the media and some in the school community portrayed the peaceful protest in a negative light―this collective narrative provides a very necessary and overdue retelling of the revolution that took place at Swarthmore College in 1969. The group of eight student protestors only recently have begun to receive credit for the school’s greater inclusiveness, as well as the influence their actions had on universities around the country.

The incredible true civil rights movement story in Seven Sisters and a Brother teaches us key lessons:

  • Old established institutions can change and will continue to change
  • The struggle to give Black history, Black experiences, and Black lives a well earned place in our culture is winnable
  • Truth can prevail when we unite with others and refuse to accept surrender

If you’ve read Warriors Don’t CryBetween the World and Me, Pulse of Perseverance, Barack Obama’s A Promised Land, or Cicely Tyson’s Just as I Am; then you’ll love Seven Sisters and a Brother.

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Table of Contents Introduction The Takeover Day Zero: Boiling Point Children of the Sixties The Takeover Day One: Locked Inside The Swarthmore Experiment The Takeover Day Two: Raising Our Profile Not in Kansas Anymore—Myra’s Story The Takeover Day Three: Flavors of Support We Had to Do Something!—Aundrea’s Story The Takeover Day Four: Sunday Morning SASS—On Our Own Fearful to Fearless—Joyce’s Story Photo Gallery The Takeover Day Five: Meeting the Press Not from Around Here—Bridget’s Story To See the World—Jannette’s Story The Takeover Day Six: Keeping Up Morale Seeing the Unseen—Marilyn A’s Story The Takeover Day Seven: Standoff From Down South to Up North—Marilyn H’s Story The Takeover Day Eight: Change of Course Tao: Finding My Way—Harold’s Story Epilogue Acknowledgments About the Authors References
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“In this fascinating group narrative, the organizers of Swarthmore College’s 1969 eight-day sit-in join voices to tell the story of how “Seven Sisters and a Brother” used peaceful protest to effect change. Looking back on the events of fifty-years ago, the authors have combined their stories as a “choral memoir” of the Takeover which forced their college to respond to the demands of Swarthmore’s Afro-American Students Society. As well as a history of their activism, this account includes the authors’ own autobiographies, providing compelling portraits of the lives of the young people who risked their futures to make a difference.” -Henry Louis Gates, Jr., Alphonse Fletcher University Professor, Harvard University, including Stony the Road: White Supremacy and the Rise of Jim Crow “Seven Sisters and a Brother illuminates the institutional failures of an elite liberal arts college in the 1960s and the work of a dedicated group of Black students to change the culture and policies of their school. Theirs is a story of the power of collective action, the value of shared identity, and the thrill of progress. Framed by a national culture of activism during the time, their accounts beautifully reflect the changes brought by the Civil Rights Movement and Black activism across the country. This memoir captures the struggle to bring Black history, Black experiences, and Black lives to the forefront of the academy. It will serve as an important guide for today’s students, faculty, administrators, and all others in the world of higher education.” -Donna Shalala, U.S. Congresswoman (D-FL 27th District), former President of the University of Miami, former President of Hunter College, and former U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services “Over eight days, eight students sparked change that defined their lives, changed an institution and fueled a movement that continues today. At this contentious time in our nation’s history, we can take lessons from the humanity and tenacity of these change makers, and inspiration from their courage and commitment to principle.” -Alberto Ibargüen, President and CEO of the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation and former publisher of The Miami Herald and El Nuevo Herald “Anyone who cares about the course of higher education in America should read this book. It tells the important and moving story of how Seven Sisters and a Brother changed the course of history and herstory at Swarthmore College and contributed to bringing a greater presence of Black people and Black Studies to the academy.” -Dr. Johnnetta Cole, President Emerita at Spelman College and Bennett College, former director of the Smithsonian National Museum of African Art “Seven Sisters and a Brother is a riveting ‘choral memoir’ that provides a compelling account of the 1969 Takeover of the Admissions Office at Swarthmore College. The authors deftly interweave the story of the movement at Swarthmore that led to profound changes -- including the creation of the Black Studies curriculum and concentration and a sustained increase in the numbers of black students and faculty -- with their own diverse, often moving, personal accounts. Although the book focuses on Swarthmore, it will be of great interest to anyone wishing to learn more about broader questions involving student activism, higher education, and movements for social change.” -Valerie A. Smith, PhD, president of Swarthmore College, and scholar of African-American literature “Swarthmore College’s small number of Black students, like those on other predominantly white campuses, didn’t just seethe in anger and despair after Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s assassination - they acted, demanding more Black students, Black Studies programs and hiring of Black faculty. Seven Sisters and a Brother tells the story of their courageously managed eight-day sit-in in 1969, activism that enacted positive change and made Swarthmore a better learning environment for everyone who has experienced the institution since.’’ - Dr. Mary Frances Berry, historian and Geraldine R. Segal Professor of American Social Thought and a professor of history at the University of Pennsylvania, former chairwoman of the United States Commission on Civil Rights "A powerful, well-written book that challenges the status quo at one of the nation's most prestigious liberal arts colleges. Their demand for recognition of their identity, respect for their culture and history, and their need to connect their studies to their aspirations and talents, is compelling. Seven Sisters and a Brother proves the power of conviction can win against overwhelming odd." –Ramona Hoage Edelin, PhD, former President and CEO of the National Urban Coalition, educator and Executive Director of the District of Columbia Association of Chartered Public Schools “A timely and compelling book chronicling the odyssey of a small group of determined African American students as they endured, confronted and overcame the painful reality of institutional racism within a well-meaning northern liberal arts college during the 1960's. It’s a ‘must read’ as America is forced to contemplate overcoming the belief in a hierarchy of human value and its institutional legacies; and a reminder that colleges and universities must play pivotal roles in helping our nation jettison racism.” -Dr. Gail C. Christopher, former vice president and senior advisor at the W. K. Kellogg Foundation and one of the nation’s leading change-makers on racism and racial healing “On February 1, 1960, four North Carolina A&T University freshmen began a sit-in at Woolworth’s whites only lunch counter in Greensboro, North Carolina. It triggered a wave of student activism that captured a student energy that moved the nation politically. In eight different stories, Seven Sisters and a Brother gives illuminating testimony to what it was like being ‘young, gifted, and black’ in the 1960s. Their stories and bios capture the major themes — black power, student activism, black culture, black achievement, and collective action — that were still so prominent almost 10 years after the 1960 sit-ins and continue to resonate today. — Ed Pitt, 1960 Co-Chair, Student Executive Committee for Justice (SECJ), North Carolina A&T University—Bennett College
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The authors of Seven Sisters and a Brother have speaking engagements planned at the 2019 Miami Book Fair, a book launch moderated by NYTimes columnist Brent Staples at the Ford Foundation in NYC, as well as several anniversary events tied in to the sit-in planned at Swarthmore, and a book launch in Miami. The authors are also being interviewed by South Florida media in anticipation of their Miami appearances. Awaiting endorsements from Dr. Henry Louis Gates (Harvard University, PBS’s Finding Your Roots and Reconstruction) and Dr. Johnetta Cole (anthropologist, former Director of the Smithsonian Museum of African Art, first female African American president of Spelman College). Authors will use their networks as alumni or former educators at Swarthmore, Columbia, Harvard, John Jay School of Criminal Justice and Morehouse to garner speaking engagements and get the word out about the book.  Seven Sisters and a Brother illuminates the institutional failures of an elite liberal arts college in the 1960s and the work of a dedicated group of Black students to change the culture and policies of their school. Theirs is a story of the power of collective action, the value of shared identity, and the thrill of progress. Framed by a national culture of activism during the time, their accounts beautifully reflect the changes brought by the Civil Rights Movement and Black activism across the country.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781642507713
Publisert
2022-01-02
Utgiver
Mango Media
Høyde
216 mm
Bredde
140 mm
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
356

Innledning av

Biografisk notat

Marilyn Maye, Ed. D. Associate Professor of Educational Leadership, New Jersey City University, New York City area Harold Buchanan, M. Ed., retired Associate Director of Information Systems, Wyeth Pharmaceuticals, Philadelphia, PA area Jannette Domingo, Ph. D., retired Dean of Graduate Studies, John Jay College of Criminal Justice and Professor of Economics and Africana Studies, New York City area Joyce Baynes, Ed. D. retired Superintendent, Dunellen, NJ, Englewood, NJ Marilyn Holifield, J.D, Partner, Holland & Knight, LLP, Miami, FL, Swarthmore College Board of Managers, Harvard University Board of Overseers, and University of Miami Board of Trustees Myra Rose, M.D. Associate Professor of Medicine, Morehouse School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA Bridget Warren, Ph. D. retired Professor of Biology, University of Panama, Panama City, Rep of Panama [TBV] Aundrea Kelley, M. Ed., retired VP for Academic Affairs, Quincy College, Quincy, MA and former Acting Commissioner for Higher Education, Boston, MA area Sophia A. Nelson, Esq., is a scholar-in-residence at Christopher Newport University in Virginia. She is a bestselling author of three nonfiction books: Black Woman Redefined: Dispelling Myths and Discovering Fulfillment in the Age of Michelle Obama; the newly re-released The Woman Code: 20 Powerful Keys to Unlock Your Life, in paperback; and ePluribus One: Reclaiming Our Founders’ Vision for a United America. Nelson is a USA Today columnist, a contributing editor to thegrio.com, and a contributor to The Washington Post opinions. You can watch her regularly on network and cable television shows such as The Today Show, CNN Tonight with Don Lemon, Anderson Cooper 360, Morning Joe, PBS NewsHour, and MSNBC as a noted legal, cultural, and political analyst.