Black Bodies in the River


Searching for Freedom Summer

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By Davis W. Houck
Imprint:
UNIVERSITY PRESS OF MISSISSIPPI
Release Date:
Format:
HARDBACK
Pages:
277

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Davis W. Houck is Fannie Lou Hamer Professor of Rhetorical Studies at Florida State University. He is 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.

Davis W. Houck's small book raises big questions about Freedom Summer.--Julie Buckner Armstrong "Journal of Southern History" The myth of countless black bodies in the river cannot drive out the myth of white supremacy--only an engagement with reality can do that. . . . [Houck] goes to the heart of the events themselves. Our society needs more historians and journalists dedicated to such work.--Guy Lancaster "Arkansas Review" A master storyteller, Houck has jumped headlong into the much-reported and historicized 1964 Freedom Summer in Mississippi with a brilliant and critical twist--interrogating the truth behind the reported discovery of up to two dozen nameless Black bodies in rivers, bayous, and back roads during the FBI's search for the corpses of three murdered civil rights workers--two white and one Black. We follow Houck as he digs deep into archives, revisits old and new interviews, and walks the landscape to reveal the complicated forces that shape the history and memory of that summer, and the real violence and the spectre of it that birthed a movement. Why does that matter? We feel satisfied to repeatedly laud the three martyrs while misleadingly invoking faceless Black bodies. Why can't we, Houck asks, tell an authentic story and hold fast to the richer, deeper truth? An extraordinary book!--Kate Clifford Larson, author of Walk with Me: A Biography of Fannie Lou Hamer In this book Houck does the nearly impossible: gives voice and story to the pervasive menace of things that cannot be known or seen, merely felt and feared. He makes the hidden history of the South--of Mississippi itself--become fact and vision. This is an essential work of scholarship and humanity.--Wright Thompson, author of The Cost of These Dreams: Sports Stories and Other Serious Business Black Bodies in the River is a must-read for students and scholars alike, especially those wanting to understand exactly what happened in Mississippi during the summer of 1964--Elton H. Weaver III "Journal of African American History" Black Bodies in the River is an extraordinary and riveting look at one of the most awakening moments in civil rights history that shocked a nation. Separating fact from fiction, Houck's rhetorical analysis of a widely spread urban legend that surrounds Freedom Summer is a tour de force to be reckoned with. Readers will be captivated and enlightened as the inconvenient truth unfolds.--Keith A. Beauchamp, filmmaker of The Untold Story of Emmett Louis Till In this moving and gripping account, Davis W. Houck expertly unveils the complexity of historical memory surrounding the 1964 Freedom Summer Project. In Houck's very skilled hands, Black Bodies in the River takes the reader on a difficult, but essential, journey that reveals the tensions between who we remember as a society--and who we forget. This brilliantly conceived book is a powerful indictment of racist violence and its enduring legacy in the United States.--Keisha N. Blain, coeditor of Four Hundred Souls: A Community History of African America, 1619-2019 and author of Until I am Free: Fannie Lou Hamer's Enduring Message to America

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