Subversive Southerner: Anne Braden and the Struggle for Racial Justice in the Cold War South by Catherine Fosl; Forward by Angela Y. DavisCall Number:
Publication Date: New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2002
The first biography of the legendary southern civil rights crusader Anne Braden introduces readers to the contributions of this extraordinary woman, and the witch hunt that targeted her in the 1950s. In 1954, she was charged with sedition by McCarthyist politicians who played on fears of communism to preserve Southern segregation. Though Braden remained controversial - even within the Civil Rights Movement - in 1963 she became one of only five white Southerners whose contributions to the movement were commended by Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr. in his famed "Letter from Birmingham Jail". Subversive Southerner, beyond a story of Braden's nearly six decades of activism, is also a social history of how racism, sexism, and anticommunism intertwined in the 20th-century South as ripples from the Cold War divided the emerging Civil Rights Movement.