Have We Overcome? Race Relations Since Brown, 1954-1979 Edited by
Michael V. Namorato Essays by Lerone Bennett, Jr., Vincent Harding,
Morton J. Horwitz, William E. Leuchtenburg, Henry M. Levin, C. Eric
Lincoln, and Robert H. Wiebe On May 17, 1954, the United States Supreme
Court rendered the first of two historic decisions in Brown v. Board of
Education of Topeka. One year later, the conclusion to a second case
demanded that integration proceed "with all deliberate speed." These two
verdicts affected American life far beyond the schools and proved the
beginning of the end to the segregated South. The essays in Have We
Overcome? Race Relations Since Brown, 1954-1979, delivered by major
scholars just after America's bicentennial and on the twenty-fifth
anniversary of the Brown decision, endeavor to answer that question and
determine what strides have been made and what remains to be overcome.
This book is the final volume in a three-part investigation which begins
with What Was Freedom's Price? and includes The Age of Segregation: Race
Relations in the South, 1890-1945. All three are available again in
paperback from University Press of Mississippi. Michael V. Namorato is a
professor of history at the University of Mississippi.