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Anne Braden and The Civil Rights Movement James Stewart 12/03/13 Race and Revolution.

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Presentation on theme: "Anne Braden and The Civil Rights Movement James Stewart 12/03/13 Race and Revolution."— Presentation transcript:

1 Anne Braden and The Civil Rights Movement James Stewart 12/03/13 Race and Revolution

2 Biography Born Anne McCarty in Louisville, Kentucky in 1924 to a middle-class white family. Attended Randolph-Macon College in Virginia. Newspaper work with the Anniston Star, the Birmingham News, the Age-Herald, and the Times. Married Carl Braden while working for the Times. Anne and Carl Braden left newspaper work to become publicists and fought against segregation. The Bradens sold a House to the Wade family and were charged with sedition. Southern Educational Fund

3 Biography (Continued) Used her paper the Southern Patriot to urge people for Integration. Fall 1957: Highlander Folk School and Martin Luther King Jr. July 1958: Published The Wall Between. Gave one of the first analytical reports of the 1960’s sit-ins. Continued Social Justice work until she died in 2006.

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5 Anne Braden in American Memory Academia- Books about the Civil Rights Movements Catharine Fosl and the University of Louisville Anne Braden Institute for Social Justice Research Landmarks in Louisville Documentary

6 Why is Anne Braden Not Remembered? She was a female and a feminist. She was white. She was an alleged communist. She was radical in her views. She was not located in the heart of the Civil Rights Movement.

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8 Conclusion  Anne Braden was an influential publicist for the Civil Rights Movement and worked towards women’s equality.  Braden is remember in Louisville and Academia.  Braden is almost forgotten in American Memory.

9 Work Cited for Images http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/2/20/Anne_McCar ty_Braden.jpg/220px-Anne_McCarty_Braden.jpg http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/2/20/Anne_McCar ty_Braden.jpg/220px-Anne_McCarty_Braden.jpg http://api.ning.com/files/ku3CJiVhwHgLpSj8KjnqRsgJoZBZJPnuEKEVi1 oM0ML3sJlVWOBFzjOtvuH1LUDPyAuXKIbm76fqreyvDvpu9Eo2XMS3Z rwJ/100_07131.jpg?width=737&height=552 http://api.ning.com/files/ku3CJiVhwHgLpSj8KjnqRsgJoZBZJPnuEKEVi1 oM0ML3sJlVWOBFzjOtvuH1LUDPyAuXKIbm76fqreyvDvpu9Eo2XMS3Z rwJ/100_07131.jpg?width=737&height=552 http://merlenedavis.bloginky.com/files/2009/06/fosl.jpg http://www.ket.org/bookclub/images/braden02b.jpg http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/5153/1865/1600/n-anne- braden-1960.jpg http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/5153/1865/1600/n-anne- braden-1960.jpg

10 References Fosl, Catherine. “There Was No Middle Ground: Anne Braden and the Southern Social Justice Movement,” NWSA Journal 11 (1999):24-48. Bailey, Alison. “Locating Identities: Toward a View of Privilege,” Hypatia 13 (1998): 27-42. Fosl, Catherine. Subversive Southerner: Anne Braden and the Struggle for Racial Justice in the Cold War South. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2002. Anne Braden Institute for Social Justice Research.” University of Louisville. Accessed October 23, 2013. http://anne-braden.org/. Ernst, John. “The Not So Silent Minority: Louisville’s Antiwar Movement,” Journal of Southern History 73 (2007): 105-142. “Anne Braden: Southern Patriot,” Kentucky Arts Council. Accessed November 20, 2013. http://www.annebradenfilm.org/


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