The
Life and Legacy of
Martin
Luther King, Jr.
Resources
at the SJRCC Libraries
PAL = Palatka Campus
| OPC = Orange Park Campus | SAC = St. Augustine Campus
= BOOK |
= DVD or CD |
= VHS |
= CASSETTE
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A
Testament of Hope: The Essential Writings and Speeches
of Martin Luther King, JR. -
Publisher's Marketing: ""We've
got some difficult days ahead," civil rights activist
Martin Luther King, Jr., told a crowd gathered at Memphis's
Clayborn Temple on April 3, 1968. "But it really
doesn't matter to me now because I've been to the mountaintop.
. . . And I've seen the promised land. I may not get
there with you. But I want you to know tonight that
we as a people will get to the promised land."
These prohetic words, uttered the day before his
assassination, challenged those he left behind to
see that his "promised land" of racial equality
became a reality; a reality to which King devoted
the last twelve years of his life.
These words and other are commemorated here in the
only major one-volume collection of this seminal twentieth-century
American prophet's writings, speeches, interviews,
and autobiographical reflections. "A Testament
of Hope" contains Martin Luther King, Jr.'s essential
thoughts on nonviolence, social policy, integration,
black nationalism, the ethics of love and hope, and
more."
Call number: SAC - E185.97.K5 A25 1991
Call number: PAL - E185.97.K5 A25 1991
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Ring
Out Freedom!: The Voice of Marthin Luther King, Jr.
and the Making of the Civil Rights Movement
- Publisher's
Marketing: "Martin Luther King, Jr. was
more than the civil rights movement's most visible
figure, he was its voice. This book describes what
went into the creation of that voice. It explores
how King used words to define a movement. From a place
situated between two cultures of American society.
King shaped the language that gave the movement its
identity and meaning. Fredrik Sunnemark shows how
materialistic, idealistic, and religious ways of explaining
the world coexisted in King's speeches and writings.
He points out the roles of God, Jesus, the church,
and "the Beloved Community" in King's rhetoric.
Sunnemark examines King's use of allusions, his strategy
of employing different meanings of key ideas to speak
to different members of his audience, and the way
he put into play international ideas and events to
achieve certain rhetorical goals. The book concludes
with an analysis of King's development after 1965,
examining the roots, content, and consequences of
his so-called radicalization."
Call number: OPC - E185.97.K5 S866 2004
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Partners
to History: Martin Luther King Jr., Ralph David Abernathy,
and the Civil Rights Movement -
Publisher's Marketing:
"Ralph David Abernathy and Martin Luther King
Jr. were inseparable and together helped to establish
what would become the modern American Civil Rights
Movement. They preached, marched, and were frequently
jailed together. Donzaleigh Abernathy, Ralph's youngest
daughter, has written Partners to History as a testament
to the courage, strength, and endurance of these men
who stirred a nation with their moral fortitude. She
also pays tribute to the thousands of unsung heroes--the
other partners to this history--who were foot soldiers
in the endless struggle for freedom, justice, and
equality. This document captures in words and pictures
how the dream of two visionaries changed the course
of American history and inspired the world.
Partners to History is a unique look at a troubling
time, and its usage of dramatic--and personal--photographs,
combined with the voices of King and Abernathy, seamlessly
conveys the fears, frustrations, and pain of the long
days and nights spent planning the many crusades.
Donzaleigh Abernathy's recollections provide personal
insight from someone who lived through the tumult
and witnessed firsthand the relationship of these
lifelong friends. "People didn't know Daddy and
Uncle Martin," she writes. "They know the
legends. They don't know the fathers, the husbands,
the men, the human beings. I feel obliged to tell
the beautiful stories of these beautiful men I lived
with and loved."
Chronicling the crucial events of the movement, from
the early strategy sessions in the homes of integrationists
and the Montgomery Bus Boycott to Birmingham, the
Freedom Riders, and the March on Washington, the author
provides a unique insider's perspective. With heart-wrenchingprecision,
she lays bare the horrifying deaths of four little
girls in the bombing of the Sixteenth Street Baptist
Church and follows the search for three murdered civil
rights workers in Philadelphia, Mississippi. She goes
behind the scenes to the intimate moments and reveals
the determination of two families caught up in the
fight for equal rights.
King and Abernathy believed in a cause and laid their
lives on the line time and time again, knowing deep
in their hearts that they were working not only for
their people, but for the good of all humankind. When,
on April 4, 1968, Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated,
Ralph David Abernathy vowed to persevere and continue
their dream, knowing that people could not be free
until the walls came tumbling down.
Inspirational and beautifully illustrated, Partners
to History reveals the remarkable relationship between
two great leaders and serves as a reminder and tribute
to this tumultuous era."
Call number: PAL - E185.61 .A165 2003
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Between
Cross & Crescent: Christian and Muslim Perspectives
on Malcolm and Martin - Publisher's
Marketing: "The interconnections between
Martin Luther King, Jr. and Malcolm X -- their faith
claims, their perspectives on culture, and their visions
of an ideal society and world -- are brought to light
by a Christian and a Muslim scholar."
Call number: PAL - BP222 .B35 2002
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Blessed
Are the Peacemakers: Martin Luther King Jr., Eight
White Religious Leaders, and the "Letters from
Birmingham Jail" - Publisher's
Marketing: "Martin Luther King Jr.'s "Letter
from Birmingham Jail" is arguably the most important
written document of the civil rights protest era and
a widely read modern literary classic. Personally
addressed to eight white Birmingham clergymen who
sought to avoid violence by publicly discouraging
King's civil rights demonstrations in Birmingham,
the nationally published "Letter" captured
the essence of the struggle for racial equality and
provided a blistering critique of the gradualist approach
to racial justice. It soon became part of American
folklore, and the image of King penning his epistle
from a prison cell remains among the most moving of
the era. Yet as S. Jonathan Bass explains in the first
comprehensive history of King's "Letter, "
this image and the piece's literary appeal conceal
a much more complex tale."
Call number: PAL - F334.B69 N415 2002
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Martin
Luther King in the African American Preaching Tradition
- Publisher's
Marketing: "Although it is well-known that
Martin Luther King Jr. borrowed ideas from non-Christian
faith traditions and was strongly influenced by European
theologians and philosophers, he remained well-grounded
in the African American preaching tradition. Valentino
Lassiter shows that King's musical delivery style was
only one aspect of this tradition. The content of his
sermons, which expressed steadfast determination in
the struggle for justice and the assurance of a just
God who willed freedom for all, has its roots in biblical
lections delivered by slave preachers. This book
is an important resource for pastors, semnarians,
and for those interested in African American history."
Call number: PAL - BV4208.U6 L375 2001
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The
Autobiography of Martin Luther King, Jr. -
Publisher's Marketing:
"Using a vast body of documentary materials,
noted scholar and editor Clayborne Carson creates
a book that remarkably approximates a self-portrait
of Martin Luther King, Jr. Delving into all aspects
of this man's life, the work covers his boyhood, his
education as a minister, and his emergence as a leader
in the Civil Rights movement. From his relationships
with his wife and children, to his dealings with the
important political figures of the era, this book
defines the history of a genuine hero."
Call number: OPC - E185.97.K5 A52 1998
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Killing
the Dream:: James Earl Ray and the Assassination of
Martin Luther King, Jr. - Publisher's
Marketing: "After thirty years, Killing
the Dream reexamines the assassination of Martin Luther
King, Jr., based on new interviews, confidential files,
and previously undisclosed evidence. Killing the Dream
not only uncovers the errors of previous investigations
- both private and governmental - but resolves the
speculation about whether the FBI, CIA, or mafia was
involved in the death of Dr. King. Killing the Dream
untangles the case's leading puzzles. Was there a
mysterious person called Raoul who directed James
Earl Ray in the year leading up to the murder? Was
the fatal shot fired from the bathroom window of a
Memphis flophouse, or from a sniper's perch hidden
in a densely overgrown garden across from King's motel?
Did the military have a covert team of snipers in
Memphis on the day King was killed? Has the recent
confession by a restaurant owner exposed a wide conspiracy
leading to a New Orleans crime family? And was James
Earl Ray a patsy, as the King family recently declared?"
Call number: OPC - E185.97.K5 P67 1998
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Parting
the Waters: America in the King Years 1954-63 -
Publisher's Marketing:
" Hailed as the most masterful story ever told
of the American civil rights movement, "Parting
the Waters" is destined to endure for generations.
Moving from the fiery political baptism of Martin
Luther King, Jr., to the corridors of Camelot where
the Kennedy brothers weighed demands for justice against
the deceptions of J. Edgar Hoover, here is a vivid
tapestry of America, torn and finally transformed
by a revolutionary struggle unequaled since the Civil
War.
Taylor Branch provides an unsurpassed portrait of
King's rise to greatness and illuminates the stunning
courage and private conflict, the deals, maneuvers,
betrayals, and rivalries that determined history behind
closed doors, at boycotts and sit-ins, on bloody freedom
rides, and through siege and murder.
Epic in scope and impact, Branch's chronicle definitively
captures one of the nation's most crucial passages."
Call number: SAC - E185.61 .B7914 1988
Call number: PAL - E185.61 .B7914 1989
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Pillar
of Fire: America in the King Years, 1963-64 -
Publisher's Marketing: "In
"Pillar of Fire", the second volume of his
America in the King Years trilogy, Taylor Branch portrays
the civil rights era at its zenith. The first volume,
"Parting the Waters", won the Pulitzer Prize
for History. It is a monumental chronicle of a movement
that stirred from Southern black churches to challenge
the national conscience during the Eisenhower and Kennedy
years. In this masterly continuation of the narrative,
Branch recounts the climactic struggles as they commanded
the national and international stage. "Pillar
of Fire" covers the far-flung upheavals of the
years 1963 to 1965-- Dallas, St. Augustine, Mississippi
Freedom Summer, LBJ's Great Society and the Civil
Rights Act of 1964, Vietnam, Selma. And it provides
a frank, revealing portrait of Martin Luther King,
Jr.-- haunted by blackmail, factionalism, and hatred
while he tried to hold the nonviolent movement together
as a dramatic force in history. Allies, rivals, and
opponents addressed racial issues that went deeper
than fair treatment at bus stops or lunch counters.
Participants on all sides stretched themselves and
their country to the breaking point over the meaning
of simple words: dignity, equal votes, equal souls.
Branch's gallery of historic characters also includes:
Malcolm X, who challenged King's vision of nonviolent
integration and lived under threat of death from the
Nation of Islam.
Lyndon Johnson, who believed racial conflict was
destroying his political base in the South and threatening
his dream to end poverty.
J. Edgar Hoover, under whose direction the FBI, with
Attorney General Robert Kennedy's approval, spied
on King with wiretaps and bugs, and yet solved the
most heinous racial crimes of the era.
Diane Nash, the passionate leader behind sit-ins
and Freedom Rides, whose determination shaped the
Selma voting rights movement.
Abraham Heschel, the Hasidic theologian who bonded
with King in devotion to the Hebrew prophets.
Robert Moses, the Mississippi SNCC leader who finally
came undone over the human suffering caused by his
Freedom Summer.
Fannie Lou Hamer, a sharecropper who commanded a
powerful voice for the unlettered.
"Pillar of Fire" takes readers inside the
dramas that shook every American institution, from
the local pulpit to the Presidency. We disappear with
courageous young people into Mississippi's feudal
Parchman Penitentiary. We absorb the shock of a single
Presidential election in 1964 that revolutionized
the structure of partisan politics. We follow Northern
rabbis summoned by King, and Mary Peabody, mother
of the governor of Massachusetts, into the segregated
jails of St. Augustine, Florida. We witness the Shakespearean
conflicts between Lyndon Johnson and King and Hoover
and Robert Kennedy.
Branch brings to bear fifteen years of research--
archival investigation; nearly two thousand interviews:
new primary sources, from FBI wiretaps to White House
telephone recordings-- in a seminal work of history.
"Pillar of Fire" captures the intensity
of the legendary King years, when the movement broke
down walls between races, regions, sexes, and religions,
and between America and the larger world. Its struggle
to rescue and redeem, its victories and defeats, its
failings and sacrifices gave rise to opposing tides
that still dominate the national debate about justice
and democratic government. The story of this movement
is an incandescent chapter in America's distinctive
quest for freedom."
Call number: SAC - E185.61 .B7915 1998
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Murder
in Memphis - Publisher's
Marketing: "On April 4, 1968, Dr. Martin
Luther King, Jr., was shot and killed in Memphis,
Tennessee. Although James Earl Ray was arrested and
charged with the crime in a prearranged and rehearsed
hearing conducted without cross-examination or challenge
by defense, he later insisted he was a pawn in a far-reaching
conspiracy. Coinciding with the 25th anniversary,
Murder in Memphis provides explosive information and
invites readers to decide for themselves what really
happened. Photographs."
Call number: PAL - E185.97.K5 L34 1993
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My
Life with Martin Luther King, Jr.
- Publisher's Marketing:
"When Coretta Scott King first wrote this book,
America was just beginning to cope with the tragedy
of his assassination. Full of new insights about the
past, present, and future, this revised edition of
Mrs. King's inspiring memoir is both a narrative history
of the Civil Rights movement and a personal account
of one extraordinary woman's life with one extraordinary
man."
Call number: OPC - E185.97.K5 K5 1993
Call number: PAL - E185.97.K5 K5 1969
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The
Day Martin Luther King Jr. Was Shot: A Photo History
of the Civil Rights Movement
Call number: OPC - E185.97.K5 H3 1992
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Voice
of Deliverance: The Language of Martin Luther King,
Jr., and Its Sources - Publisher's
Marketing: "The true sources of Martin
Luther King's powerful sermons and speeches are revealed
in this fascinating exploration of his words and imagery.
Voice of Deliverance tells of the pulpit traditions
of the African-American folk church and of the printed
sermons of white, liberal Protestant preachers. King's
blending of these styles shows how he skillfully he
was able to unite blacks and whites to move together
in harmony to action and commitment."
Call number: OPC - E185.97.K5 M49 1992
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Who
Killed Martin L King?: The True Story by the Convicted
Assassin - Publisher's
Marketing: "Destined to be one of the
most controversial books of the century, and a sure-fire
bestseller, this true story by the convicted assassin
of Dr. King will reveal the conspiracy and coverup
which has tormented America, and one solitary man,
for more than 20 years."
Call number: PAL - HV6248.R39 A3 1991 |
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The
Eyes on the Prize Civil Rights Reader: Documents,
Speeches, and Firsthand Accounts from the Black Freedom
Struggle
Call number: PAL - E185.615 .E95 1991
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Martin
and Malcolm and America: A Dream or a Nightmare -
Publisher's Marketing:
"A landmark book examining the relationship between
the thought and the lives of two great men and their
challenge to us all. King saw America as "essentially
a dream", Malcolm saw the same America as a "realized
nightmare". Yet Cone reveals two men whose missions
were complementary and moving towards convergence."
Call number: PAL - E185.97 .K5 C66 1991
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The
Words of Martin Luther King, Jr. - Publisher's
Marketing: "This handsome, bestselling
volume contains more than 120 excerpts from the great
leader's speeches, sermons, and writings. King's thoughts
on racism, civil rights, justice and freedom, faith
and religion, nonviolence and peace, and the Community
of Man rank among history's greatest. Includes 16
historic photographs."
Call number: SAC - E185.97.K5 A25
Call number: PAL - E185.97.K5 A25 1983
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Martin
Luther King - Publisher's
Marketing: "Follows the life of the Baptist
minister and black leader who won the Nobel Peace
Prize before finally being assassinated in 1968."
Call number: OPC - E185.97.K5 S53 1985
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Roots
of Resistance: The Nonviolent Ethic of Martin Luther
King, Jr. - Publisher's
Marketing: "This study paints a personal
portrait of King's life, his dream, and his lifelong
search for nonviolent ways to combat injustice."
Call number: SAC - E185.97.K5 W33 1985
Call number: PAL - E185.97.K5 W33 1985
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Let
the Trumpet Sound: The Life of Martin Luther King,
Jr. - Publisher's Marketing:
"Winner of the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Book
Award and the Christopher Award, this brilliant examination
of the life of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., portrays
a very real man with a powerful dream that helped
shape American history."
Call number: PAL - E185.97.K5 O18 1982
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Strength
to Love - Publisher's
Marketing: "This is a collection of classic
sermons preached by Martin Luther King, Jr."
Call number: PAL - BX6452 K5 1981
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Search
for the Beloved Community - Publisher's
Marketing: "this book examines the thought
of Martin Luther King, Jr. and the influences that
shaped it. Kenneth L. Smith's firsthand knowledge
of King's seminary studies provides the background
for an incisive analysis of the influences of the
Christian tradition."
Call number: PAL - E185.97.K5 S58 1974
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Why
We Can't Wait
Call number: PAL -E185.61 .K54 1964
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I
Have a Dream - Publisher's
Marketing: "Relive Dr. King’s immortal
speech in its entirety, as it was delivered to thousands
on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington
D.C."
Call number: SAC - E185.97.K5 M37 2004 DVD
Call number: SAC - E185.97.K5 M35 VIDEO
Call number: OPC - E185.97.K5 M35 VHS
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We Shall Not Be Moved - Publisher's
Marketing: "This video examines the American
Civil Rights Movement from the perspective of African-American
churches. These churches provided moral and spiritual
support as well as being critical and strategic centers
for the movement."
Call number: OPC - E185.61 .W47 2001 VHS
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