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Women of the Civil Rights Era

Layla Gupta

This audiobook is narrated by a digital voice. The Civil Rights Movement of the mid-twentieth century is often remembered for its towering male figures—Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, and Thurgood Marshall among them. But behind the podiums and headlines, countless Black women stood at the heart of the struggle, fueling change with determination, resilience, and extraordinary courage. These women were not merely participants—they were strategists, organizers, educators, and visionaries whose foundational work made the movement possible. Long before the Montgomery Bus Boycott or the March on Washington, Black women were laying the groundwork for civil rights through grassroots activism. In church basements, schoolhouses, kitchens, and community centers, they organized voter registration drives, literacy campaigns, and anti-lynching efforts. Their activism was often rooted in lived experience: the sting of Jim Crow laws, the daily indignities of segregation, and the constant threat of violence. It was through this painful familiarity with injustice that their resistance took shape. Figures like Ida B. Wells in the late 19th and early 20th centuries were early examples of this legacy. Wells’ fearless journalism exposed the horrors of lynching and challenged the silence of the broader society. Similarly, Mary Church Terrell, one of the first African American women to earn a college degree, fought for both racial and gender equality, bridging the worlds of civil rights and women’s suffrage. Duration - 1h 39m. Author - Layla Gupta. Narrator - Digital Voice Melissa G. Published Date - Saturday, 18 January 2025. Copyright - © 2025 Layla Gupta ©.

Location:

United States

Description:

This audiobook is narrated by a digital voice. The Civil Rights Movement of the mid-twentieth century is often remembered for its towering male figures—Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, and Thurgood Marshall among them. But behind the podiums and headlines, countless Black women stood at the heart of the struggle, fueling change with determination, resilience, and extraordinary courage. These women were not merely participants—they were strategists, organizers, educators, and visionaries whose foundational work made the movement possible. Long before the Montgomery Bus Boycott or the March on Washington, Black women were laying the groundwork for civil rights through grassroots activism. In church basements, schoolhouses, kitchens, and community centers, they organized voter registration drives, literacy campaigns, and anti-lynching efforts. Their activism was often rooted in lived experience: the sting of Jim Crow laws, the daily indignities of segregation, and the constant threat of violence. It was through this painful familiarity with injustice that their resistance took shape. Figures like Ida B. Wells in the late 19th and early 20th centuries were early examples of this legacy. Wells’ fearless journalism exposed the horrors of lynching and challenged the silence of the broader society. Similarly, Mary Church Terrell, one of the first African American women to earn a college degree, fought for both racial and gender equality, bridging the worlds of civil rights and women’s suffrage. Duration - 1h 39m. Author - Layla Gupta. Narrator - Digital Voice Melissa G. Published Date - Saturday, 18 January 2025. Copyright - © 2025 Layla Gupta ©.

Language:

English


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Duration:01:39:37