The Year of Birmingham: Reflections on the 50th Anniversary of the Birmingham Civil Rights Movement is a year-long series of programs sponsored by Samford University and the Birmingham Public Library to commemorate the climactic events of 1962-63. The Mann Center will organize a number of these activities in collaboration with other departments at the university. The following are some of the programs now planned:
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| Taylor Branch |
Oct. 17, 2012 - Taylor Branch, bestselling author of the landmark trilogy America in The King Years, will deliver the annual Roderick J. Davis Lecture.
Feb. 5, 2013 -
"Ethnic Notions";
film screening and discussion of racial stereotypes.
Feb. 19, 2013 - "King: Montgomery to Memphis"; film screening and discussion.
March 5, 2013 - "Who Speaks for Birmingham?"; screening of the 1961 CBS News special report by Howard K. Smith, followed by a discussion with U.S. District Judge U.W. Clemon, Samford History Professor Tennant McWilliams, and Freedom Rider Jean Thompson.
May 1, 2013 - "Crisis," a screening of the 1963 documentary about Alabama Gov. George Wallace's "stand in the schoolhouse door"; discussion forum to follow.
In addition, the Mann Center is planning
Courageous Conversations and other opportunities to consider how Birmingham's past experience with the civil rights struggle continues to define and exacerbate the community's social, economic and political problems.