School Desegregation

Oral Histories toward Understanding the Effects of White Domination

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Volume Editor:
This book is written for the Millennial Generation to educate them about what school desegregation was actually about—the struggle over white domination in the United States. The textbooks they read as high school students describe the heroic efforts of African Americans to achieve civil rights but do not describe who was denying them these rights—white Americans. The oral histories in this book reveal how individuals navigated efforts to achieve educational equity amidst efforts to reassert white domination. These accounts counter the textbook history the Millennial Generation read which omits the massive white resistance to school desegregation, the various ways whites used subterfuge to slow down and redirect school desegregation in what would more benefit whites, and the concerted white political backlash that has been ensconced in educational policy and reform beginning with A Nation at Risk and continuing in No Child Left Behind. That is, educational policy as we know it is all about asserting white domination and not about educating children, and thus the Millennial Generation is faced with undoing what their parents and grandparents have done.

Cover image by Echo Lilly Wilson.

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Introduction
School Desegregation and White Domination
Pages: 1–18
Educational Apartheid in Macon/Bibb County, Georgia
An Oral History of Desegregation and Resegregation
Pages: 37–49
Segregation and Desegregation in Parsons, Kansas
Memories of Douglass School 1908–1958 – Narrative of Marietta Smith
Pages: 51–61
A Historically Black High School Remains Intact
We Weren’t Thinking about White Students
Pages: 63–76
The Final Days of Douglass School
The Narrative of Andrew “Chip” Johnson
Pages: 79–88
Dan Edwards Remembering Desegregation in Tampa
Introduction and Commentary by Barbara J. Shircliffe
Pages: 89–102
Educational Apartheid in Macon/Bibb County, Georgia
An Oral History of Desegregation and Resegregation, Part II – Alethea’s Story
Pages: 103–115
Marilyn Matthiew: Remembering Desegregation in Tampa
Introduction and Commentary by Barbara J. Shircliffe
Pages: 117–127
Just Let Them Have the School
A White Student’s Perspective of School Desegregation
Pages: 129–142
Ambivalence, Angst, and Hope
Black Principals in Mississippi
Pages: 145–157
“It’s Time to Make Things Right”
Symbolic Order and the Limits of Imagination
Pages: 159–177
Implementing the “Law of the Land”
White Superintendents in Mississippi
Pages: 179–193
Conclusion
White Backlash and Educational Reform – Then and Now
Pages: 195–221
Contributors
Pages: 223–225
Educational Researchers and their students
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