Get Free Shipping on orders over $79
Step by Step - Douglas Dowd

Step by Step

By: Douglas Dowd (Editor), Mary Nichols (Editor), Nick Lawrence (Photographer)

Paperback | 1 April 1965 | Edition Number 1

At a Glance

Paperback


RRP $26.35

$25.75

or 4 interest-free payments of $6.44 with

Ships in 5 to 7 business days

Step by Step is not simply one more book about civil rights, designed to underscore the repression of the American Negro and relate episodically what some have done about it, even though the book does serve both those functions to a degree. This book is unique in that its aim is to instruct those who would become involved in the civil rights struggle--instruct them in how to develop and work out a project.The book arose out of the authors' experiences in a project which was itself unique: The Cornell-Tompkins Committee for Free and Fair Elections in Fayette County, Tennessee. The project entailed six to eight weeks of living in Fayette County by forty-five volunteers, mostly students from Cornell University, in the summer of 1964. The project was financed entirely, to an amount exceeding fifteen thousand dollars, by the contributions of students, faculty, and townspeople in and around Cornell University, and by contributions from more distant places solicited by those involved at Cornell.Of the many things learned from the Cornell project, one of the most important was how responsive a community can become when confronted with a concrete civil rights program, one with which it can identify, one small enough to be feasible and intelligible, but still compelling in terms of the needs involved.The authors believe that many thousands of Americans can find no good answer to the questions "What can I do." not because they are unwilling to do much, nor because there is little to be done, but because they lack the knowledge of what is needed where, and how and with whom one can go about responding to such needs. The book therefore undertakes, step by step, to describe and explain the development of the project at Cornell and its workings during the summer in Tennessee, and reasons that similar steps can be taken by others, with appropriate variations. It concludes with a detailed appendix listing civil rights projects and organizations desperately in need of help, whether in terms of money or volunteers or both.

More in Society & Culture

Looking from the North : Australian history from the top down - Henry Reynolds
Hooked : Inside the murky world of Australia's gambling industry - Quentin Beresford
How Women Became Poets : A Gender History of Greek Literature - Emily Hauser
The Philosophy of Jazz : Philosophies - Kevin Le Gendre

RRP $24.99

$22.75

MrBallen Presents: Where Nightmares Live : The Graphic Stories - MrBallen
The Mysterious Case of the Victorian Female Detective - Sara Lodge
I Do Know Some Things - Richard Siken

RRP $34.99

$29.99

14%
OFF
What's on Her Mind : The Mental Workload of Family Life - Allison Daminger
Harry Potter Mini Howler : Record Your Own Message! - Donald Lemke

RRP $29.99

$24.99

17%
OFF
Born : The Untold History of Childbirth - Lucy Inglis

RRP $32.99

$26.99

18%
OFF
No Is Not a Lonely Utterance : The Art and Activism of Complaining - Sara Ahmed
Bandidos : Past, Present and Future - Tony Vartiainen

RRP $60.00

$45.75

24%
OFF
Sundays under the Lemon Tree - Julia Busuttil Nishimura

RRP $24.99

$20.75

17%
OFF
The Breath of the Gods : The History and Future of the Wind - Simon Winchester
Against the Machine : On the Unmaking of Humanity - Paul Kingsnorth

RRP $55.00

$42.75

22%
OFF
PIX : The Magazine that told Australia's Story - Margot Riley

RRP $59.99

$47.75

20%
OFF
giwang : Weather and wildlife on Wiradjuri Country - Belinda Bridge