Hodding Carter III is an American journalist and politician.
He is professor emeritus of public policy at University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill. Carter worked for eighteen years as a
reporter and editor for the Delta Democrat-Times of Greenville,
Mississippi, owned by his father.
Stephanie R. Rolph is associate professor of history at
Millsaps College. She is author of Resisting Equality: The
Citizens’ Council, 1954–1989.
It is startling how the themes, actions, and political climate
Carter described in the mid to late 1950s reflect the political
environment in current day Mississippi and the US. . . . The
reissued work with an extensive introduction is noteworthy and
recommended for academic and public libraries with an interest in
the history of civil rights in Mississippi.--Joyce M. Shaw
"Mississippi Libraries"
Hodding Carter III dispassionately examines here the growth and
structure of the white Citizens' Council. . . . He traces the
movement through its role in state politics, . . . its pressures
directed at the [Black community], and its effects on the white
community. Though demonstrating that the Council . . . has been
responsible for whatever success massive resistance toward
integration has had in the South, he sees its eventual destruction
in the fact that it is essentially a negative movement, dependent
on the status quo. A brief, factual, calmly reasoned book.--
"Kirkus"
This is one of the most depressing, yet important, books that this
reviewer has read in many years; for it is an analytical account of
the angry, unreconstructed revolt of conservative southerners in
Mississippi against the Supreme Court's school desegregation
decision of 1954. . . . Carter's book is must reading for all who
would understand one of this nation's most pressing problems.--
"Oakland Tribune"
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