Freedom season How 1963 transformed America's civil rights revolution

Peniel E. Joseph

Book - 2025

"In Freedom Season, acclaimed historian Peniel E. Joseph offers a stirring narrative history of 1963, marking it as the defining year of the Black freedom struggle--a year when America faced a deluge of political strife and violence and emerged transformed. Nineteen sixty-three opened with the centenary of the Emancipation Proclamation and ended with America in a state of mourning. Freedom Season shows how the upheavals of 1963 planted the seeds for watershed civil rights legislation and renewed hope in the promise and possibility of freedom"--

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A cogent argument for considering 1963 as the central year of the modern Civil Rights Movement. A historian at the University of Texas affiliated with the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs, Joseph opens his narrative with the compelling figure of a young James Baldwin, who was traveling to Mississippi to look at the voting rights initiative firsthand. Baldwin, "the leading cultural figure of the age," had committed an act of daring in turning some of John F. Kennedy's New Frontier rhetoric toward civil rights, confronting the liberal establishment and forcing JFK and brother Bobby to pay more than lip service to the cause and move instead to "pragmatic action." Kennedy did so, if perhaps reluctantly at first, unquestionably influenced by Baldwin's arguments that racial segregation adversely affected not just Black people but all Americans. Baldwin was also, Joseph argues, a figure who could move between camps: cocktail parties in New York, political sessions in Washington, the poorest hamlets in the Mississippi Delta. Alongside him, as Joseph notes, emerged a constellation of like-minded activists and writers, among them Lorraine Hansberry and Medgar Evers. While many actors central to the civil rights struggle figure in Joseph's account, including Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr., the latter of whom "became the first BlackTime magazine Man of the Year" at the end of 1963, Baldwin stands firmly at the moral center of the movement: "He loved America enough to retain a battered faith in its capacity to change." Lyndon Johnson, too, receives his due as far less diffident than the Kennedys in pressing for civil rights reforms, although it was Kennedy's assassination that served as stimulus for "the most consequential legislation that would be passed during America's Second Reconstruction." Timely reading in an era of social and legislative backsliding that threatens to erase many civil rights gains. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.