It Takes a Tragedy to Arouse Them: Collective Memory and Collective Action during the Civil Rights Movement

TitleIt Takes a Tragedy to Arouse Them: Collective Memory and Collective Action during the Civil Rights Movement
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2006
AuthorsFredrick C. Harris
JournalSocial Movement Studies
Volume5
Issue1
Pagination19-43
ISSN14742837
Abstract

This paper examines the impact that collective memories of key events related to the civil rights movement had on black political activism during the 1960s. It proposes a theory that examines the effects of collective memory on collective action by considering how events and collective memories are appropriated by political entrepreneurs for collective action. Examining four events through a rare opinion survey of blacks taken in 1966, the analysis specifies a framework that illustrates how events evolve into collective memories and how collective memories are appropriated for collective action as time passes from the original event. Qualitative materials from historical accounts, including autobiographies, biographies, and oral histories, are used to make inferences about the meaning of events to political actors. The analysis shows that one event among the four, the murder of Emmett Till, had a stronger residual effect on black activism than the other events. The findings suggest that scholarship on the movement may have underestimated the impact of Till's murder on the generation of black insurgency in the 1950s.

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DOI10.1080/14742830600621159
Short TitleIt Takes a Tragedy to Arouse Them