Description
1963 edition. Former library copy. Missing dustjacket. Hardcover has some shelf wear and slight fading. The pages are clean and in good condition. The binding is secure.
This well-preserved ex-library copy of Kenneth Clark’s “The Negro Protest” offers a fascinating window into the civil rights movement of the 1960s. Published in 1963, the same year as the March on Washington and Martin Luther King Jr.’s iconic “I Have a Dream” speech, this work captures the fervor and urgency of the era’s struggle for racial equality. Clark, a renowned psychologist and scholar, provides an insightful analysis of the psychological and sociological impacts of segregation and discrimination on Black Americans. His incisive commentary on the protests, legal battles, and grassroots activism that defined the movement offers a valuable first-hand perspective from a leading intellectual voice of the time. Despite its age and library provenance, the book’s clean pages and sturdy binding ensure that Clark’s influential work can continue to educate and inspire new generations of readers interested in this pivotal chapter of American history.