Bundle of 3 influential works in African American history and critical studies:
1. In Struggle: SNCC and the Black Awakening of the 1960s by Clayborne Carson (Harvard University Press, 1981, hardcover). Landmark study of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, tracing its pivotal role in the civil rights movement.
2. Black Over White: Negro Political Leadership in South Carolina During Reconstruction by Thomas Holt (University of Illinois Press, 1977, hardcover). Seminal analysis of Black political power during Reconstruction, exploring leadership and the struggle for democracy.
3. The New Black Renaissance: The Souls Anthology of Critical African-American Studies edited by Manning Marable (Paradigm Publishers, 2005, paperback). Collection of essays remapping Black intellectual traditions, featuring Howard Winant, Leith Mullings, Robin D. G. Kelley, Elizabeth Alexander, and others.
Together these volumes cover Reconstruction politics, the 1960s civil rights struggle, and late 20th-century Black thought, an essential package for scholars, researchers, and collectors of African American history and culture.
Author: Clayborne Carson, Thomas Holt, Manning Marable (editor)
Publisher: Harvard University Press, University of Illinois Press, Paradigm Publishers
Year: 1981, 1977, 2005
Special attributes: 2 hardcover volumes with dust jackets, 1 trade paperback, scholarly editions
Topic: African American history, civil rights, Black political leadership, Black intellectual traditions
Subject: Civil Rights Movement, SNCC, Reconstruction, African American studies, Black leadership
Keywords: SNCC, civil rights, Reconstruction, Thomas Holt, Clayborne Carson, Manning Marable, African American politics, Black intellectual history
Condition:
All volumes tight and complete. Dust jackets show light edgewear and rubbing. Black Over White with external wear to boards. In Struggle bright and clean. New Black Renaissance paperback has moderate shelf wear with a prior owner’s name in marker on the text block edge. Interiors clean and unmarked.