Jo Zanice Bond
Race, Place, and Family: Narratives of the Civil Rights Movement in Brownsville, Tennessee, and the Nation By Copyright 2011 Jo Zanice Bond Submitted to the graduate degree program in American Studies and the Graduate Faculty of the University of Kansas in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. ________________________________ Chairperson, William M. Tuttle, Jr., Ph.D. ________________________________ Co-Chair, Sherrie J. Tucker, Ph.D. ________________________________ Randal M. Jelks, Ph.D. ________________________________ Kim Warren, Ph.D. ________________________________ Sharon O’Brien, Ph.D. Date Defended: December 5, 2011 The Dissertation Committee for Jo Zanice Bond certifies that this is the approved version of the following dissertation: Race, Place, and Family: Narratives of the Civil Rights Movement in Brownsville, Tennessee, and the Nation ________________________________ Chairperson, William M. Tuttle, Jr, Ph.D. ________________________________ Co-Chair, Sherrie J. Tucker, Ph.D. Date approved: December 5, 2011 ii Abstract This dissertation examines the Civil Rights Movement through the experiences of primarily two African American families with roots in Brownsville, Tennessee. This study, based on archival research and oral histories, chronicles three generations of citizens affiliated with the NAACP whose translocal civil rights struggles include both the South and urban North. It highlights various tactics individuals used to secure their rights and identifies African American entrepreneurship
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