Our Portion of Hell


Fayette County, Tennessee: An Oral History of the Struggle for Civil Rights

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By Robert Hamburger
Imprint:
UNIVERSITY PRESS OF MISSISSIPPI
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Format:
PAPERBACK
Pages:
277

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Description

Robert Hamburger is author of six books ranging from oral history, personal journalism, biography, and travel memoir to fiction. He produced and conducted interviews for Freedom's Front Line: Fayette County, Tennessee, a thirty-minute film about the civil rights movement that was broadcast on WKNO, the western Tennessee PBS station. He is the recipient of two National Endowment for the Humanities research awards; three Fulbright teaching fellowships (France, New Delhi, and Kolkata); three residencies at the MacDowell Artists Colony; and a New York Foundation of the Arts award in creative nonfiction.

The civil rights movement in Fayette County, Tennessee, is a story of extraordinary courage by African Americans who in 1959 mobilized their community to demand voting rights and full citizenship. These activists demonstrated steely resolve and experienced hardship, losses, and wins that enabled them and subsequent generations of African Americans to vote and to access educational, economic, and other opportunities. Today, this story should inspire African Americans and others who are fighting to preserve and expand rights while facing opposition by those determined to return America to a darker time in history.--Daphene R. McFerren, daughter of Fayette County activists John and Viola McFerren and executive director of the Benjamin L. Hooks Institute for Social Change at the University of Memphis Like an exquisite documentary film, Robert Hamburger seamlessly connects oral history interviews with narrative history to present the neglected story of the indigenous civil rights movement in Fayette County, Tennessee. The reissuing of this important book, first published in 1973, could not have come at a more appropriate time as this nation continues to struggle to complete the egalitarian work started by the brave people of Fayette County in the face of renewed political and economic obstacles.--Steven F. Lawson, emeritus professor of history, Rutgers University, and coauthor of Exploring American Histories

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