The Rebellious Life of Mrs. Rosa Parks
By Jeanne Theoharis
Adapted by Brandy Colbert and Jeanne Theoharis
By Jeanne Theoharis
Adapted by Brandy Colbert and Jeanne Theoharis
By Jeanne Theoharis
Adapted by Brandy Colbert and Jeanne Theoharis
By Jeanne Theoharis
Adapted by Brandy Colbert and Jeanne Theoharis
Part of ReVisioning History for Young People
Part of ReVisioning History for Young People
Category: Teen & Young Adult Nonfiction
Category: Teen & Young Adult Nonfiction
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$18.95
Feb 02, 2021 | ISBN 9780807067574 | Young Adult
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Feb 02, 2021 | ISBN 9780807067581 | Young Adult
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Praise
“A nuanced exploration of a woman with a lifelong commitment to social change.”
—Kirkus Reviews, Starred Review
“Exhaustively researched . . . . a powerful, eye-opening account and a valuable assessment of how historical events and figures can be manipulated, reduced, or embellished to serve the status quo. Neither teachers nor students could possibly expect more from a text.”
—Eleanor J. Bader, The Progressive
“Assign this book in the high school curriculum. Organize a Black Lives Matter teen book club to discuss this book. Give this book as a gift to the young person in your life. Now, perhaps more than ever, we need the real story of Rosa Parks.”
—Melissa Harris-Perry
“A must-read for young people.”
—Bryan Stevenson, author of Just Mercy
“To truly honor Mrs. Rosa Parks is to set the record straight. She was not an accidental heroine or just a tired old lady; she was a lifelong rebellious freedom fighter in every sense of the word. Theoharis has captured the beauty and complexity of Mrs. Parks’s life. Deeply researched and engaging, this rich chronicle of Mrs. Parks’s life is a page-turner for adults and youth alike. Theoharis and Colbert have told Mrs. Parks’s life with so much love, care, and truth telling. Bravo!”
—Bettina L. Love, author of We Want to Do More Than Survive: Abolitionist Teaching and the Pursuit of Educational Freedom
“Rosa Parks is one of the few people that young people often get to learn about from the civil rights movement—and yet the story they learn usually obscures the most valuable lessons of her life. The Rebellious Life of Mrs. Rosa Parks is the most effective tool I have ever used to deepen my students’ understanding of her life—the real Rosa Parks was a racial justice activist in the North and the South; an organizer against lynching and sexual assault; a mentor who empowered young people to become change makers. My students couldn’t put the book down because with every page they realized that the traditional story they had been taught about her life wasn’t true—and that the real story was so much more captivating, energizing, and instructive for how to challenge racial and social injustice. No secondary American history course is complete without this book.”
—Jesse Hagopian, high school Ethnic studies teacher and co-editor of Black Lives Matter at School: An Uprising for Educational Justice
“Mrs. Parks’s ‘rebellious’ life always challenged inequality and injustice, even before she refused to give up her seat on a Montgomery, Alabama, bus in 1955. This revealing life story introduces readers to a woman whose courage and vision we can all emulate. Above all else, Mrs. Parks believed that young people would carry the civil rights movement forward, and Theoharis and Colbert show how to do just that through a thrillingly vivid account of how one woman learned to do her part to change the world.”
—Martha S. Jones, author of Vanguard: How Black Women Broke Barriers, Won the Vote, and Insisted on Equality for All
“In a moving work that documents Rosa Parks’s misunderstood role within the civil rights movement, Theoharis and Colbert bring the fast moving dynamism of the movement’s history to life. The Rebellious Life of Mrs. Rosa Parks rescues Rosa Parks from the mythologies of civil rights lore by instead situating her within the long twentieth-century Black Freedom struggle, both North and South, as an activist and an organizer. Highly accessible and eminently readable, this book is retooling with the next generation of would-be activists with the politics and history that can help them forge new paths in the ongoing struggle to make Black lives matter.”
—Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor, author of From #BlackLivesMatter to Black Liberation
“Finally, a book about the real Rosa Parks—the Rosa Parks who was a lifelong activist, a tireless organizer, and who did so much more than refuse to give up her seat on that bus in Montgomery, Alabama. In story after story, Jeanne Theoharis and Brandy Colbert breathe life into the rebellious Mrs. Rosa Parks, a fighter for justice who will intrigue and inspire young people. And for all of us who want to teach honestly about Rosa Parks and the civil rights movement, this is an essential resource.”
—Bill Bigelow, curriculum editor, Rethinking Schools, and co-director, Zinn Education Project
“The Rebellious Life of Mrs. Rosa Parks offers young readers a detailed exploration of an iconic freedom fighter. In clear and moving prose, Theoharis and Colbert reintroduce a woman who spent the majority of her life fighting on behalf of Black people and women. Young readers will learn that while Rosa Parks is most widely known for her courage connected to the Montgomery bus boycott, her story really represents a lifetime of fierce commitment to social justice.”
—Erica Armstrong Dunbar, author of Never Caught: The Story of Ona Judge
Table Of Contents
INTRODUCTION
CHAPTER ONE
A (Shy) Rebel Is Born
CHAPTER TWO
Following Rules and Breaking Some Too
CHAPTER THREE
Introducing Raymond Parks—“The First Real Activist I Ever Met”
CHAPTER FOUR
The Newest Member of the NAACP
CHAPTER FIVE
Organizing in the Face of Opposition
CHAPTER SIX
The NAACP Youth Council Gets a Fresh Start
CHAPTER SEVEN
Resistance + Anger = Seeds of Change
CHAPTER EIGHT
Claudette Colvin Sits Down (and Rises Up)
CHAPTER NINE
Highlander Folk School
CHAPTER TEN
Seeking Justice for Emmett Till
CHAPTER ELEVEN
December 1, 1955
CHAPTER TWELVE
A Boycott Blossoms
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
Rosa Parks Goes to Court
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
A Yearlong Boycott
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
The Best of Times and the Worst of Times
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
Victory at Last (but the Struggle Continues)
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
“The Northern Promised Land That Wasn’t”
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
Rosa Parks Joins the Fight Up North
CHAPTER NINETEEN
The March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom
CHAPTER TWENTY
Working for John Conyers
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
Meeting Malcolm X
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
Going (Back) Down South
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
The Detroit Uprising
CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
The Assassination of Dr. King
CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE
Black Power!
CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX
“Freedom Fighters Never Retire”
CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN
The Struggle Continues
Acknowledgments
Selected Bibliography
Image Credits
Index
About the Author
About the Adapter
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