Publication of this complete edition of The Movement is an important contribution to popular understanding of the social movements of the 1960s. No other periodical provided such extensive coverage of the transformation of the civil rights movement into the diverse radical movements of the late 1960s.Malcolm X, Stokely Carmichael, and Huey Newton are among the many black militant leaders who are discussed in The Movement. Its insightful and sympathetic coverage, including participants' accounts, of a wide range of community organizing activities such as anti-war/anti-draft protests and Cesar Chavez's National Farm Workers Association and grape workers' strike in Delano, California. It covers national and international events, with articles on revolutionary movements in Cuba, Vietnam, and Africa. It is an excellent source of information regarding the social change activities of the late 1960s. As such, it is invaluable to students of the New Left, contemporary race relations, African-American history and Black Studies.
Publication of this complete edition of The Movement is an important contribution to popular understanding of the social movements of the 1960s.
PrefaceBay Area Friends of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee: October 1964, November 1964, December 1964, January 1965, February 1965, March 1965The Movement: Volume I: Number 4, April 1965--Number 12, December 1965Volume II: Number 1, January 1966--Number 11, December 1966Volume III: Number 1, January 1967--Number 12, December 1967Volume IV: Number 1, January 1968--Number 12, January, 1969Volume IV: Number 1, February/March 1970Volume V: Number 1, February 1969--Number 12, January 1970Index