The author consults family documents to write the story of one White family’s social, rhetorical, and psychological development in relationship to the American Civil Rights Movement, from 1948 to the early 1970s and after. The father in the family is a progressive Southern minister; the daughter reflects on how the family and the social movement matured together, and the lasting effects on her family’s life. Personal stories of involvement in civil rights are related to illuminate the personal in the political.
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