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Examines how different memory texts - filmic, landscape, presidential speech, and museums - function both to bolster and question the centrality of murdered white men in the legacy of Freedom Summer.

Produktbeschreibung
Examines how different memory texts - filmic, landscape, presidential speech, and museums - function both to bolster and question the centrality of murdered white men in the legacy of Freedom Summer.
Autorenporträt
Davis W. Houck is Fannie Lou Hamer Professor of Rhetorical Studies at Florida State University. He is author of Black Bodies in the River: Searching for Freedom Summer; coauthor of Emmett Till and the Mississippi Press; and coeditor of Women and the Civil Rights Movement, 1954-1965 and The Speeches of Fannie Lou Hamer: To Tell It Like It Is, all published by University Press of Mississippi. He is also the founder of the Emmett Till Archive at FSU and is partnering with the West Tallahatchie School District in the Mississippi Delta to bring Till-themed archival documents to high school students.