Resilience and Revolution: Anne Moody's Civil Rights Journey

638 Words2 Pages

This is a personal memoir by Anne Moody written in 1968. It highlights the challenges an African-American woman underwent while growing up in the 20th century. The book covers the author’s life from childhood until her late twenties. It also includes her engagement with the United States Civil Rights Movement. This began while she was a student at Tougaloo College (Moody 255). It provides the authors’ personal evolution and is a symbol of the development of the civil rights movement. The author, born as Essie May Moody in 1940, was brought up in Wilkerson County, a County that was marked with racism and poverty. The economy of her family depended on plantation until the point in which the father deserted them. The mother worked as a maid in

Open Document