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        8. The 1970 Uvalde School Walkout
- 
            
            
        Vinicio Sinta
        
 und Maggie Rivas-Rodriguez 
                                    
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                                            Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
 - Contents v
 - List of Illustrations ix
 - Foreword xi
 - Introduction. Lone Star Civil Rights: Histories, Memories, and Legacies 1
 - 
                            PART I. Violence and Resistance: African Americans in East Texas
 - 1. Ignored News and Forgotten History: The 1963 Prairie View Student Movement 23
 - 2. “Plumb Chaos”: Segregation and Integration in Deep East Texas 33
 - 3. “Something Was Lost”: Segregation, Integration, and Black Memory in the Golden Triangle 53
 - 4. Texas Time: Racial Violence, Place Making, and Remembering as Resistance in Montgomery County 71
 - 
                            PART II. Survival and Self-Determination: Chicano/a Struggles in South and West Texas
 - 5. The South-by- Southwest Borderlands’ Chicana/o Uprising: The Brown Berets, Black and Brown Alliances, and the Fight against Police Brutality in West Texas 93
 - 6. The Long Shadow of Héctor P. García in Corpus Christi 115
 - 7. “It Was Us against Us”: The Pharr Police Riot of 1971 and the People’s Uprising against El Jefe Político 131
 - 8. The 1970 Uvalde School Walkout 151
 - 9. “A Totality of Our Well-Being”: The Creation and Evolution of the Centro de Salud Familiar La Fe in South El Paso 177
 - 
                            PART III. Coalitions and Control: Black and Brown Liberation Struggles in Metropolitan Texas
 - 10. Contesting White Supremacy in Tarrant County 199
 - 11. Civil Rights in the “City of Hate”: Black and Brown Organizing against Police Brutality in Dallas 221
 - 12. Self-Determined Educational Spaces: Forging Race and Gender Power in Houston 245
 - 13. From Police Brutality to the “United Peoples Party”: San Antonio’s Hybrid SNCC Chapter, the Chicano/a Movement, and Political Change 259
 - 14. “You Either Support Democracy or You Don’t”: Structural Racism, Segregation, and the Struggle to Bring Single-Member Districts to Austin 287
 - 
                            PART IV. Inside the Civil Rights in Black and Brown Oral History Project
 - 15. Recovering, Interpreting, and Disseminating the Hidden Histories of Civil Rights in Texas 305
 - Appendix: Selected Interview Transcripts 325
 - Acknowledgments 357
 - Notes 363
 - Contributors 439
 - Index 445
 
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
 - Contents v
 - List of Illustrations ix
 - Foreword xi
 - Introduction. Lone Star Civil Rights: Histories, Memories, and Legacies 1
 - 
                            PART I. Violence and Resistance: African Americans in East Texas
 - 1. Ignored News and Forgotten History: The 1963 Prairie View Student Movement 23
 - 2. “Plumb Chaos”: Segregation and Integration in Deep East Texas 33
 - 3. “Something Was Lost”: Segregation, Integration, and Black Memory in the Golden Triangle 53
 - 4. Texas Time: Racial Violence, Place Making, and Remembering as Resistance in Montgomery County 71
 - 
                            PART II. Survival and Self-Determination: Chicano/a Struggles in South and West Texas
 - 5. The South-by- Southwest Borderlands’ Chicana/o Uprising: The Brown Berets, Black and Brown Alliances, and the Fight against Police Brutality in West Texas 93
 - 6. The Long Shadow of Héctor P. García in Corpus Christi 115
 - 7. “It Was Us against Us”: The Pharr Police Riot of 1971 and the People’s Uprising against El Jefe Político 131
 - 8. The 1970 Uvalde School Walkout 151
 - 9. “A Totality of Our Well-Being”: The Creation and Evolution of the Centro de Salud Familiar La Fe in South El Paso 177
 - 
                            PART III. Coalitions and Control: Black and Brown Liberation Struggles in Metropolitan Texas
 - 10. Contesting White Supremacy in Tarrant County 199
 - 11. Civil Rights in the “City of Hate”: Black and Brown Organizing against Police Brutality in Dallas 221
 - 12. Self-Determined Educational Spaces: Forging Race and Gender Power in Houston 245
 - 13. From Police Brutality to the “United Peoples Party”: San Antonio’s Hybrid SNCC Chapter, the Chicano/a Movement, and Political Change 259
 - 14. “You Either Support Democracy or You Don’t”: Structural Racism, Segregation, and the Struggle to Bring Single-Member Districts to Austin 287
 - 
                            PART IV. Inside the Civil Rights in Black and Brown Oral History Project
 - 15. Recovering, Interpreting, and Disseminating the Hidden Histories of Civil Rights in Texas 305
 - Appendix: Selected Interview Transcripts 325
 - Acknowledgments 357
 - Notes 363
 - Contributors 439
 - Index 445