“The City Too Busy to Care”: The Atlanta Youth Murders and the Southern Past, 1979–81 Paul Mokrzycki Renfro On May 25, 1981, an estimated three thousand people convened at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C., to protest the slayings of black Atlanta youths. Rally organizers framed the demonstration as part of the March on Washington tradition.
On the Participatory Archive: The Formation of the Eastern Kentucky African American Migration Project Karida L. Brown
The Uses of Memoir in Writing History: Or, What I Learned About Autobiography from John Hope Franklin and August Meier Kenneth R. Janken
Protesting the Privilege of Perception: Resistance to Documentary Work in Hale County, Alabama, 1900–2010 Scott L. Matthews
Remembrances of the Past, Concerns for the Future, and the Potential Resilience of a Southern Coastal Town Gavin Paul Smith
A New Plantation South: Land, Labor, and Federal Favor in Twentieth-Century Arkansas by Jeannie M. Whayne (Review) Gilbert C. Fite