Civil Rights, Culture Wars: The Fight over a Mississippi Textbook by Charles W. Eagles
I've just been made aware of this book, but I'm moving it up on my reading list because it's pretty important to me. The history of the struggle for civil rights is, in many ways, my own history. Born in 1963 in Jackson, Mississippi, to a very political family, this is the world I entered into just as the fight was getting more heated.
For the past several months, I've been doing a really deep dive into the integration of Galloway United Methodist Church, and my plan is to do Millsaps next. This book is about incidents that happened later on, more into the early and mid-seventies.
Mississippi Conflict and Change was a textbook about Mississippi history written by James W. Loewen, who taught at Tougaloo, and Charles Sallis, who taught at Millsaps. It was the first Mississippi History textbook to include anything about the civil rights movement. There's where the conflict and change about the book itself came in.
Mississippi has a free textbook law. That means students of the public schools (and some parochial schools) are provided free textbooks paid for by the State of Mississippi. In order to qualify for these funds, the books have to go through an approval and adoption process as set out in the law. This is true for all the states that have a free textbook law, which I believe is all the states now.
Approving textbooks can be very political. With so many concerns about Critical Race Theory and anything about people with different sexualities, approving textbooks has become much more political than has been in many years. In the seventies, there was considerable pressure to keep the civil rights movement out of any Mississippi History textbook. Authors Lowen and Sallis, having struggled to get the book published in the first place, were determined to have it adopted by the state Textbook board, so they filed suit, accusing the board of rejecting their book illegally.
Eagle's Book "Civil Rights, Culture Wars: The Fight over a Mississippi Textbook," tells the story of the fight over getting "Conflict and Change" published.
At St. Andrews, I was taught Mississippi History using Conflict and Change. A very young priest named Jerry McBride taught it. I didn't know it at the time, but St. Andrews was the only school in the nation that had ordered the book for classroom use. I knew this because my father and grandfather ran the Mississippi State Textbook Depository.
My dad was asked to give a deposition in the case. Considering the very political nature of his business, both at Missco and Trustmark and St Dominics, he really didn't want to get mixed up in this, but he also was pretty determined to get the book adopted. Dr. Sallis was an important member of the Millsaps History Department. Bill Goodman represented the State of Mississippi in this and many other matters. He was also a life trustee of Millsaps College. Mr. Goodman's advice was that the state not fight this, that fighting it would make us look pretty bad.
At the time, there were political figures in Mississippi who had much to gain for taking a stance against a civil rights textbook. Sadly, those days may have returned. There was considerable political wrangling over this. I don't know how much is in Eagle's book, but it involved a lot of icons of my youth.
Ultimately, cooler heads were able to prevail, and the book was adopted after considerable political and legal pressure. I'm very interested to see how much of this lines up with my own memory of that period. I was thirteen and fourteen. Interestingly, the only reviewer of the book on Amazon is Bob King, former Dean at Millsaps College.
They have Mississippi Conflict and Change listed as almost $1,500 on Amazon. I think I have two copies.
Civil Rights, Culture Wars: The Fight over a Mississippi Textbook is available in hardcover, softcover, and kindle formats on Amazon.com I'll write a review once I've finished it.
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