117:, Young and several close colleagues moved to work on the Mississippi project – which had less of an emphasis on involving white volunteers – after becoming disillusioned by the difficulty of educating and training white volunteers to be effective organizers.
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Although she once described SNCC as "a liberating experience for me as a woman," Young left the organization in the late 1960s after perceiving that leadership roles had begun to be closed to women as the group formalized and narrowed its scope.
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After becoming involved with NAG at Howard, Young signed up to be a field worker for SNCC in the summer of 1963. She would work as an organizer and community bridge leader with the group until 1967. After participating in integrated SNCC
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Young began having her writing published while she was still involved in the civil rights movement. In
January 1964, her essay "And Let Us All Be Black Together" was published in
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84:(NAG) and a member of the student council. As a young activist, she was one of many young women resisting what they saw as old-fashioned standards of
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61:, the daughter of a nurse and single mother. Her father, First Lieutenant Jimmie D. Wheeler, was a pilot and member of the
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Washington, Mary Helen (1977). "Teaching Black-Eyed Susans: An
Approach to the Study of Black Women Writers".
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Wheeler's best known work is the short story "That She Would Dance No More," which was first published in
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Carmichael, Stokely; Thelwell, Michael; Ture, Kwame; Wideman, John Edgar (2003).
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Ready for
Revolution: The Life and Struggles of Stokely Carmichael (Kwame Ture)
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How Long? How Long?: African
American Women in the Struggle for Civil Rights
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member in 1965. By that time, Harris had become an important mentor figure.
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for her M.D. She works as a child and adolescent psychiatrist in
Maryland.
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Young later went back to school and earned a master's degree, then went to
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Ford, Tanisha C. (2013). "SNCC Women, Denim, and the
Politics of Dress".
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128:. The project was met with violence, as evidenced by the abduction and
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in
January 1967. The story deals thematically with self-destruction,
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Traylor, Eleanor (2014). "Black Arts
Fiction: An Introduction".
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Jean Smith Young was born Jean
Wheeler in 1942. She grew up in
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Free All Along: the Robert Penn Warren civil rights interviews
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SOS -- Calling All Black People: A Black Arts
Movement Reader
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murder of James Chaney, Andrew Goodman, and Michael Schwerner
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Meyer, David S.; Whittier, Nancy; Robnett, Belinda (2002).
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Young was a leader in the 1964 voter registration drive in
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imposed by institutions. When asked by then-Dean of Women
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American psychiatrist, writer, and civil rights activist
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Drury Smith, Stephen; Ellis, eds., Catherine (2019).
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Many Minds, One Heart: SNCC's Dream for a New America
96:, Young refused. She graduated with honors and as a
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216:Mitchell, Verner D.; Davis, Cynthia (2019-05-15).
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73:in 1961 and continued on to
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314:. UNC Press Books.
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