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White Girl Clara Silverstein

White Girl By Clara Silverstein

White Girl by Clara Silverstein


$11.99
Condition - Very Good
Only 1 left

Summary

This poignant account recalls firsthand the upheaval surrounding court-ordered busing in the early 1970s to achieve school integration. Sixth-grader Clara Silverstein tells her story, with questions about race and the use of schools to engineer social change.

White Girl Summary

White Girl: A Story of School Desegregation by Clara Silverstein

This poignant account recalls firsthand the upheaval surrounding court-ordered busing in the early 1970s to achieve school integration. Like many students at the vanguard of this great social experiment, sixth-grader Clara Silverstein was spit on, tripped, and shoved by her new schoolmates. At other times she was shunned altogether. In the conventional imagery of the civil rights era, someone in Silverstein's situation would be black. She was white, however - one of the few white students in her entire school. My story is usually lost in the historical accounts of busing, Silverstein writes. At the predominantly black public schools she attended in Richmond, Virginia, Silverstein dealt daily with the unintended, unforeseen consequences of busing as she also negotiated the typical passions and concerns of young adulthood - all with little direction from her elders, who seemed just as bewildered by the changes surrounding them. When Silverstein developed a crush on a black boy, when yet another of her white schoolmates switched to a private school, when she naively came to class wearing a jacket with a Confederate flag on it, she was mostly on her own to contend with the fallout. Silverstein's father had died when she was seven. Another complication: she was Jewish. As her black schoolmates viewed her through the veil of race, Silverstein gazed back through her private grief and awareness of religious difference. Inspired by her parents' ideals, Silverstein remained in the public schools despite the emotional stakes. I was lost, she admits. If I learned nothing else, I did come to understand the scourge of racism. Her achingly honest story, woven with historical details, confronts us with powerful questions about race and the use of our schools to engineer social change.

White Girl Reviews

This wonderful memoir inverts our understanding of desegregation, reminding us that the white students on the bus were just as heroic as their black counterparts. The story is at once a vivid description of a controversial social experiment, an intimate chronicle of a girl's turbulent journey through adolescence, and a loving tribute to a visionary father who died too young. - James S. Hirsch, author of Two Souls Indivisible

About Clara Silverstein

Clara Silverstein is an editor and writer for the Boston Herald. She is also a published poet and the program director for the Writers' Center at Chautauqua in upstate New York.

Additional information

GOR013947575
9780820326627
0820326623
White Girl: A Story of School Desegregation by Clara Silverstein
Used - Very Good
Hardback
University of Georgia Press
20040930
168
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - White Girl