Defying Dixie: The Radical Roots of Civil Rights, 1919–1950
Glenda Elizabeth Gilmore, . . Norton, $39.95 (642pp) ISBN 978-0-393-06244-1
Yale historian Gilmore turns a wide lens on the battle against Jim Crow in this worthy if overstuffed collective biography of the black and white Southern activists whose work before the larger Civil Rights movement constitute its neglected, forgotten or repressed origins. Expanding the “temporal and geographical boundaries” of the fight for racial equality, Gilmore’s scholarship considers international racial politics and traces a progression from 1920s Communists, who joined forces in the late 1930s with a radical left to form a Southern popular front, to the 1940s grassroots activists. Gilmore (
Reviewed on: 10/15/2007
Genre: Nonfiction