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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 |
| Illustrations follow pages 84, 156, and 270. | |
| Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |