At The Dark End Of The Street Summary

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Danielle MGuire’s At the Dark End of the Street is a well written, supported, and detailed writing that shines a much-needed light on woman in the civil rights movement. This writing is very rare and it helps to provide more detail on what is considered known by every American. Writing detailed about Rosa Parks’ refusal to give up her seat and it’s trigger of the Montgomery bus boycott, readers get a real accounts of the story. Not only does McGuire shine light to the Rosa Parks story, but also she gives an investigative account of Recy Taylor’s rape by six white men in Abbeville, Alabama. Rosa Parks and others organized the Committee for Equal Justice to raise money to fight for fair justice and prosecution of Recy Taylor’s attackers. The Taylor situation set a platform for rape and sexual violence to become the fight for which African Americans looked to destroy white supremacy. The book points out very clearly that the Montgomery bus boycott in 1955 was successful because of the women activists fighting for equality. McGuire doesn’t waste anytime in her research of the civil rights movements, she identifies unknown names, and suppressed stories of women who challenged the white power movement of the time. McGuire uses strong court cases in the writing to highlight …show more content…

The writings clearly show that not the whole truth has been told in history books or classrooms, yet another method to keep African Americans in the dark about history. The struggles of the 1950’s seem to have some relevancies to today when compared McGuire’s information to the reality of the world we currently live in. McGuire’s reference of the murder of Willie McGee’s to suggest the threats of a consensual interracial sexual relationship in the South is an obvious issue and the details about McGee’s prosecution and his death are not as simple and to the point as previously

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