Carry It On
The War on Poverty and the Civil Rights Movement in Alabama, 1964-1972
Title Details
Pages: 416
Illustrations: 22 b&w photos
Trim size: 6.000in x 9.000in
Formats
Paperback
Pub Date: 07/15/2008
ISBN: 9-780-8203-3051-8
List Price: $32.95
Related Subjects
HISTORY / United States / 20th Century
POLITICAL SCIENCE / Civil Rights
POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / Social Services & Welfare
Carry It On
The War on Poverty and the Civil Rights Movement in Alabama, 1964-1972
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Carry It On is an in-depth study of how the local struggle for equality in Alabama fared in the wake of new federal laws—the Civil Rights Act, the Economic Opportunity Act, and the Voting Rights Act. Susan Youngblood Ashmore provides a sharper definition to changes set in motion by the fall of legal segregation. She focuses her detailed story on the Alabama Black Belt and on the local projects funded by the Office of Economic Opportunity (OEO), the federal agency that supported programs in a variety of cities and towns in Alabama. Black Belt activists who used OEO funds understood that the structural underpinnings of poverty were key components of white supremacy, says Ashmore. They were motivated not only to end poverty but also to force local governments to comply with new federal legislation aimed at achieving racial equality on a number of fronts.
Ashmore looks closely at the interactions among local activists, elected officials, businesspeople, landowners, bureaucrats, and others who were involved in or affected by OEO projects. Carry It On offers a nuanced picture of the OEO, an agency too broadly criticized; a new look at the rise of southern Black Power; and a compelling portrait of local citizens struggling for control over their own lives. Ashmore provides a more complete understanding of how southerners worked to define for themselves how freedom would come during the years shaped by the civil rights movement and the war on poverty.
Ashmore's well-written and -researched analysis of the War on Poverty in Alabama reveals how white leaders and bureaucrats subverted equal opportunity programs to serve their racist agenda and how African Americans counterattacked with limited success. Her book is a major contribution to the revisionist literature on the civil rights movement.
—Pete Daniel, Author of Toxic Drift: Pesticides and Health in the Post–World War II South
Carry It On is right at the forefront of the next frontier of civil rights historiography: the period after the passage of national civil rights legislation and the great set-piece confrontations but before the advent of a New South biracial politics in the 1970s. Ashmore shows how the War on Poverty in Alabama was both a training ground for future African American politicians and a setting for the southern variant of Black Power.
—Tony Badger, author of The New Deal: The Depression Years, 1933–1940
A brief review cannot do justice to Ashmore's skill in weaving together the economic and political aspects of a still-unfinished effort to remake Alabama along more just and egalitarian lines. Her book signals a new level of breadth and sophistication in civil rights scholarship.
—Journal of American History
[A] powerful indictment of the operation of the War on Poverty on the ground.
—American Historical Review
Susan Youngblood Ashmore’s book is well worth the read. It is a detailed and intricate work of history that captures a complicated and important story of the civil rights movement from the macrolevel politics of presidential edicts and congressional fights to the microlevel role of how these policies influence activists and post-1965 Alabama civil rights work.
—Nishani Frazier, Journal of American Ethnic History
Ashmore makes a compelling case in an exceptional narrative, and she provides an outstanding analysis of the intersection of politics and economics in the aftermath of federal intervention in American inequality.
—Alabama Review
Winner
Willie Lee Rose Prize, Southern Association for Women Historians
Winner
Francis B. Simkins Award, Southern Historical Association