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The Tuskegee Student Uprising

A History

#2 in series

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

BCALA 2023 Nonfiction Award Winner
History of Education Society's Outstanding Book Award 2022 Semifinalist
Named one of the top 25 books all students should read by Tuskegee University

The untold story of a dynamic student movement on one of the nation's most important historically Black campuses
The Tuskegee Institute, one of the nation's most important historically Black colleges, is primarily known for its World War II pilot training program, a fateful syphilis experiment, and the work of its founder, Booker T. Washington. In The Tuskegee Student Uprising, Brian Jones explores an important yet understudied aspect of the campus's history: its radical student activism.
Drawing upon years of archival research and interviews with former students, professors, and administrators, Brian Jones provides an in-depth account of one of the most dynamic student movements in United States history. The book takes the reader through Tuskegee students' process of transformation and intellectual awakening as they stepped off campus to make unique contributions to southern movements for democracy and civil rights in the 1960s. In 1966, when one of their classmates was murdered by a white man in an off-campus incident, Tuskegee students began organizing under the banner of Black Power and fought for sweeping curricular and administrative reforms on campus. In 1968, hundreds of students took the Board of Trustees hostage and presented them with demands to transform Tuskegee Institute into a "Black University." This explosive movement was thwarted by the arrival of the Alabama National Guard and the school's temporary closure, but the students nevertheless claimed an impressive array of victories. Jones retells these and other events in relation to the broader landscape of social movements in those pivotal years, as well as in connection to the long pattern of dissent and protest within the Tuskegee Institute community, stretching back to the 19th century. A compelling work of scholarship, The Tuskegee Student Uprising is a must-read for anyone interested in student activism and the Black freedom movement.

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    • Kirkus

      September 1, 2022
      Historical study of a little-known but significant student demonstration at a storied Black college. The Tuskegee Institute is well known for having produced heroic pilots during World War II and, negatively, for "an attempt to use manipulative and deceitful methods to understand the late stages of syphilis." As Jones, director of the Center for Educators and Schools at the New York Public Library, notes, it is far less well known for a student protest that took place days after Martin Luther King's assassination, when students presented its board of trustees with a list of proposals to create a "Black University." In response to the occupation of a couple of Tuskegee buildings, the Alabama National Guard prepared to invade the campus, with one White guardsman telling a student, "you all at Tuskegee have been too uppity for a long time." A diligent historian who provides important cultural and social context throughout the text, Jones reminds readers that while student unrest in the 1960s and early '70s has been enshrined in the memory of Kent State, it was at Black schools that the most state violence was exercised. Consequently, "when the Alabama National Guard entered Tuskegee's campus in April 1968, it was not unreasonable for students and faculty to assume that the resulting confrontation might have been fatal." As it happens, a dean convinced the Guard not to attack, but school administrators responded by dismissing the entire student body and requiring them to apply for readmission. They also "began openly making plans to use the shutdown to permanently expel the main organizers of the movement." The following year, though, Tuskegee established a Black studies program and began its course of transforming itself into a true university. The book is part of the publisher's new Black Power series, edited by Ibram X. Kendi and Ashley D. Farmer. A well-researched and -written addition to the history of the tumultuous 1960s.

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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