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| Introduction | p. 1 |
| Fighting for My Rights: One SNCC Woman's Experience, 1961-1964 | p. 7 |
| From Little Memphis Girl to Mississippi Amazon | p. 9 |
| Entering Troubled Waters: Sit-ins, the Founding of SNCC, and the Freedom Rides, 1960-1963 | p. 33 |
| What We Were Talking about Was Our Future | p. 39 |
| An Official Observer | p. 45 |
| Onto Open Ground | p. 49 |
| Two Variations on Nonviolenc... MORE | p. 53 |
| A Young Communist Joins SNCC | p. 55 |
| Watching, Waiting, and Resisting | p. 61 |
| Diary of a Freedom Rider | p. 67 |
| They Are the Ones Who Got Scared | p. 76 |
| Movement Leaning Posts: The Heart and Soul of the Southwest Georgia Movement, 1961-1963 | p. 85 |
| Ripe for the Picking | p. 91 |
| Finding form for the Expression of My Discontent | p. 100 |
| Uncovered and Without Shelter, I Joined This Movement for Freedom | p. 119 |
| We Turned this Upside-Down Country Right Side Up | p. 128 |
| Everybody Called Me "Teach" | p. 140 |
| I Love to Sing | p. 144 |
| Since I Laid My Burden Down | p. 146 |
| We Just Kept Going | p. 152 |
| Standing Tall: The Southwest Georgia Movement, 1962-1963 | p. 157 |
| It Was Simply in My Blood | p. 163 |
| Freedom-Faith | p. 172 |
| Resistance U | p. 181 |
| Caught in the Middle | p. 195 |
| Get on Board: The Mississippi Movement through the Atlantic City Challenge, 1961-1964 | p. 211 |
| Standing Up for Our Beliefs | p. 217 |
| Inside and Outside of Two Worlds | p. 223 |
| They Didn't Know the Power of Women | p. 230 |
| Do Whatever You Are Big Enough to Do | p. 240 |
| Depending on Ourselves | p. 250 |
| A Grand Romantic Notion | p. 257 |
| If We Must Die | p. 266 |
| Cambridge, Maryland: The Movement under Attack, 1961-1964 | p. 271 |
| The Energy of the People Passing through Me | p. 273 |
| A Sense of Family: The National SNCC Office, 1960-1964 | p. 299 |
| Peek around the Mountain | p. 303 |
| My Real Vocation | p. 311 |
| A SNCC Blue Book | p. 326 |
| Getting Out the News | p. 332 |
| It's Okay to Fight the Status Quo | p. 344 |
| SNCC: My Enduring "Circle of Trust" | p. 348 |
| Working in the Eye of the Social Movement Storm | p. 366 |
| In the Attics of My Mind | p. 381 |
| Building a New World | p. 388 |
| Fighting Another Day: The Mississippi Movement after Atlantic City, 1964-1966 | p. 395 |
| A Simple Question | p. 399 |
| The Mississippi Cotton Vote | p. 403 |
| The Freedom Struggle was the Flame | p. 409 |
| An Interracial Alliance of the Poor: An Elusive Populist Fantasy? | p. 417 |
| We Weren't the Bad Guys | p. 427 |
| Sometimes in the Ground Troops, Sometimes in the Leadership | p. 436 |
| The Constant Struggle: The Alabama Movement, 1963-1966 | p. 447 |
| There Are No Cowards in My Family | p. 453 |
| Singing for Freedom | p. 460 |
| Bloody Selma | p. 470 |
| Playtime Is Over | p. 473 |
| Captured by the Movement | p. 483 |
| We'll Never Turn Back | p. 503 |
| Letter to My Adolescent Son | p. 514 |
| Black Power: Issues of Continuity, Change, and Personal Identity, 1964-1969 | p. 525 |
| Neither Black nor White in a Black-White World | p. 531 |
| I Knew I Wasn't White, but in America What Was I? | p. 540 |
| Time to Get Ready | p. 552 |
| Born Freedom Fighter | p. 572 |
| Postscript: We Who Believe in Freedom | p. 587 |
| Index | p. 593 |
| Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
Faith S. Holsaert, Durham, North Carolina, teacher and fiction writer, has remained active in lesbian and women's, antiwar, and justice struggles. Martha Prescod Norman Noonan, community organizer, activist, homemaker, and teacher of history including the civil rights movement, lives near Baltimore. Filmmaker and Movement lecturer Judy Richardson's projects include the PBS documentary series Eyes on the Prize and other historical documentaries. She lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Betty Garman Robinson, a community organizer, lives in Baltimore and is active in the reemerging grassroots social justice movement. Jean Smith Young is a child psychiatrist who works with community mental health programs in the Washington, DC area. New York City consultant Dorothy M. Zellner wrote and edited for the Center for Constitutional Rights and CUNY Law School. All of the editors worked for SNCC.