Ann Moody's "Coming of Age in Mississippi" for US History After 1865.
View Paper
ESSAY DETAILS
Words: 1202
Pages: 4
(approximately 235 words/page)
Pages: 4
(approximately 235 words/page)
Essay Database > History > North American History
"Coming of Age in Mississippi" is the 1968 autobiography of author Anne Moody's maturity from a child, to a high school and college student, and then into an active participant in the civil rights movement. Moody portrays her black family living in the rural South and her involvement with such groups as the NAACP and the CORE. She ends her novel with an ambivalent tone that conveys her insecurity about the future of the movement. Throughout
showed first 75 words of 1202 total
Sign up for EssayTask and enjoy a huge collection of student essays, term papers and research papers. Improve your grade with our unique database!
showed first 75 words of 1202 total
showed last 75 words of 1202 total
that whites have "a disease, an incurable disease in its final stage," and asks, "What [are] our chances against such a disease (267)?" Perhaps she feels that the words of the song "We Shall Overcome" are true: "The truth will make us free some day [. . .] we shall overcome some day (384)." She may be uncertain of the short-term future of the movement, but "I wonder" if she truly believes that the Negroes will overcome racism "some day (384)."
that whites have "a disease, an incurable disease in its final stage," and asks, "What [are] our chances against such a disease (267)?" Perhaps she feels that the words of the song "We Shall Overcome" are true: "The truth will make us free some day [. . .] we shall overcome some day (384)." She may be uncertain of the short-term future of the movement, but "I wonder" if she truly believes that the Negroes will overcome racism "some day (384)."