A record of the American civil rights movement. Included are speeches by Martin Luther King Jr, and his "Letter from Birmingham City Jail", an interview with Rosa Parks, selections from "Malcolm X Speaks"; Black Panther Bobby Seale's "Seize the Time", a piece by Herman Badillo on the infamous Attica prison uprising; addresses by Harold Washington, Jesse Jackson, Nelson Mandela and much more.
Clayborne Carson is professor of history at Stanford University, and director of the Martin Luther King, Jr., Research and Education Institute. Since 1985 he has directed the Martin Luther King Papers Project, a long-term project to edit and publish the papers of Martin Luther King, Jr.
A great collection of civil rights speeches and documents. This book became a godsend during the writing of a recent (and very large) college paper of mine. I especially found the MLK speeches useful and moving, and I had to try very hard to only research, as I found myself reading through the book for hours.
The Eyes on the Prize Civil Rights Reader: Documents, Speeches, and Firsthand Accounts from the Black Freedom Struggle is an anthology of a plethora of speeches, essays, various documents, and firsthand accounts collected and edited by the team of Clayborne Carson, David J. Garrow, Gerald Gill, Vincent Harding, and Darlene Clark Hine. It is a collection of documents from firsthand accounts, which spans the history of the American Civil Rights Movement.
For the most part, I rather like most if not all of these contributions. The Eyes on the Prize Civil Rights Reader: Documents, Speeches, and Firsthand Accounts from the Black Freedom Struggle is an anthology that collected many documents from speeches, letters, personal essays or journal entries, interviews, and much more separated into fourteen sections, which presents a definitive collection about the American Civil Rights Movement.
Included are the Supreme Court's Brown vs. Board of Education decision in its entirety; speeches by Martin Luther King, Jr., and his famous "Letter from Birmingham City Jail"; an interview with Rosa Parks; selections from Malcolm X Speaks; Black Panther Bobby Seale's Seize the Time; Ralph Abernathy's controversial And the Walls Came Tumbling Down; a piece by Herman Badillo on the infamous Attica prison uprising; addresses by Harold Washington, Jesse Jackson, Nelson Mandel, and the list goes on.
Like most anthologies there are weaker contributions, but The Eyes on the Prize Civil Rights Reader: Documents, Speeches, and Firsthand Accounts from the Black Freedom Struggle may be the exception. It is a superb record of one of the greatest and most turbulent movements of this century and is essential for anyone interested in learning how far the American civil rights movements has come and how far it has to go.
All in all, The Eyes on the Prize Civil Rights Reader: Documents, Speeches, and Firsthand Accounts from the Black Freedom Struggle is perhaps the most comprehensive anthology of primary sources available, spanning the entire history of the American civil rights movement.
This book collects primary documents on civil rights from the 1950s up to the very early 1990s. The editors have done a really good job of selecting relevant and interesting documents. I've used this for my classes and have found it to be a valuable resource. I recommend it for anyone who is interested in the civil rights movement.
A very interesting, in depth look at the Civil Rights movement with a lot of primary source documents. The only drawback is the way it is arranged. It could be more clearly laid out.
Rarely do we get a readable version of primary documents, especially such a compendium as this, charting one of the most important twoscore years of our country's history. The most distressing aspect of this book, for me, is that the events recounted, and the hopes dashed and raised by speaker after speaker, seemed all too contemporary, and not to have ended 30 years ago. I kept asking myself: why is 2020 so much like 1980, and 1960? Shame, America, shame. We, who have much, will be required to account for the much good we SHOULD have done with it. Sooner or later, justice is coming. Will you and I be on the right side of it?
Great collection of primary source materials covering the same. Intent as the 14 part Eyes on the Prize television series. It is helpfully organized into 14 chapters each corresponding with an episode.
This is a very good collection of civil rights era primary sources and articles. One of my professors, Gerald Gill, wrote a couple of the articles. He was a thoughtful historian who knew everything there was to know about American history during this period.
Wonderful documents of the civil rights and black power movement. Like most history, the voices of women, queer folks, and other oppressed identities are scarce in comparison to the perspectives of straight cismen.
A superb book which through a series of documents brings to life the Civil Rights movement as no ordinary text book can. An engrossing and life affirming read.