This memoir of one man's coming-of-age through the Civil Rights
movement follows his childhood innocence of white supremacy during the
50's to his awakening as a full-time organizer in the deep south, and
the petrifying costs he was bound to pay.
Standing serves up an authentic memoir of a young Black boy growing up
in a highly segregated environment: the heart of Dallas, Texas, during
the era where segregation was the law of the land. Ernest McMillan came
of age within an loving family and a nurturing community, virtually
shielded from the outside--rampaging tides of white supremacy and a
caste system squarely based on color. Dallas is often portrayed as a
city in which the Civil Rights movement bypassed, but those claims are
mythical in word and deed.
McMillan's emergence into manhood fighting for equal rights in the
"Black Belt" South and his return to his birthplace to challenge the
status quo of the white power structure brought him face to face with
forces that were dead set on wiping him off the planet entirely, or
imprisoning him in perpetuity.