Anne Moody (1940–2015)
Author of Coming of Age in Mississippi
About the Author
Anne Moody was born Essie Mae Moody on September 15, 1940 in Centreville, Mississippi. As a girl, she cleaned white neighbors' houses to help support her family. She received a bachelor's degree from Tougaloo College in 1964. During these years she was active in civil rights efforts in Mississippi, show more working with the Congress of Racial Equality, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, and the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. In 1963, she joined a racially mixed group in a sit-in at a Woolworth's lunch counter in Jackson, Mississippi. She wrote Coming of Age in Mississippi, which was published in 1968, while living in New York. This non-fiction work described what it was like to grow up black in the era of Jim Crow. Her other book, Mr. Death, is a collection of short stories for young people on the theme of mortality and was published in 1975. She held a series of non-writing jobs, including as a counselor in a New York City antipoverty program, before returning to Mississippi. She died on February 5, 2015 at the age of 74. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Image credit: Moody in the 70s By Die Permission desBildautors Werner Bethsold wurde am 8.9.2016 und erneut am 19.8.2016 als pdf an commons-copyvio(at)wikimedia.org uebermittelt. - Werner Bethsold, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=51538008
Works by Anne Moody
Associated Works
Daughters of Africa: An International Anthology of Words and Writings by Women of African Descent from the Ancient Egyptian to the Present (1992) — Contributor — 187 copies
Growing Up in the South: An Anthology of Modern Southern Literature (1991) — Contributor — 163 copies, 1 review
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Other names
- Moody, Essie May (birth name)
- Birthdate
- 1940-09-15
- Date of death
- 2015-02-05
- Gender
- female
- Education
- Tougaloo College (BA ∙ 1964)
Natchez Junior College - Occupations
- civil rights activist
memoirist - Organizations
- Congress of Racial Equality
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee - Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Centreville, Mississippi, USA
- Places of residence
- Centreville, Mississippi, USA
New York, New York, USA
Berlin, Germany - Place of death
- Gloster, Mississippi, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
Coming of Age in Mississippi: The Classic Autobiography of Growing Up Poor and Black in the Rural South by Anne Moody
[Coming of Age in Mississippi] by [[Anne Moody]]
Anne Moody's memoir of her childhood and young adult years growing up Black in Mississippi is raw and honest and full of pain. Moody was born in 1940 in rural Mississippi. She grew up in poverty with a father who deserted her mother and then a mostly absent stepfather. She began working in service at a young age to earn money. A good student, Moody's education and drive are a large part of the book, but her need to make money is always present. show more She goes to college and starts working with the civil rights movement - participating in sit-ins and demonstrations and trying to stir up support among the Black population.
This book is hard to read for several reasons. Of course, Moody's life is a impossible-to-deny look at how hard life was for Black Americans in the 1950s and 60s. She pulls no punches talking about how all opportunities were denied for her and her family and everything was a struggle. Her language is coarse and angry at times, with lots of swearing, as is understandable considering what she was fighting against. She blames many different people for the lack of change - recognizing the systemic racism in government systems, questioning the efficacy of peaceful protest, calling out police corruption, and screaming in frustration at fellow Blacks who refuse to vote.
Her book is keenly observant and incredibly moving. It is not easy to read, but it is just as important today as it was when it was written in 1968. For me, it clearly shows why we are still where we are today. This was life in America just over 40 years ago. show less
Anne Moody's memoir of her childhood and young adult years growing up Black in Mississippi is raw and honest and full of pain. Moody was born in 1940 in rural Mississippi. She grew up in poverty with a father who deserted her mother and then a mostly absent stepfather. She began working in service at a young age to earn money. A good student, Moody's education and drive are a large part of the book, but her need to make money is always present. show more She goes to college and starts working with the civil rights movement - participating in sit-ins and demonstrations and trying to stir up support among the Black population.
This book is hard to read for several reasons. Of course, Moody's life is a impossible-to-deny look at how hard life was for Black Americans in the 1950s and 60s. She pulls no punches talking about how all opportunities were denied for her and her family and everything was a struggle. Her language is coarse and angry at times, with lots of swearing, as is understandable considering what she was fighting against. She blames many different people for the lack of change - recognizing the systemic racism in government systems, questioning the efficacy of peaceful protest, calling out police corruption, and screaming in frustration at fellow Blacks who refuse to vote.
Her book is keenly observant and incredibly moving. It is not easy to read, but it is just as important today as it was when it was written in 1968. For me, it clearly shows why we are still where we are today. This was life in America just over 40 years ago. show less
This is an unforgettable and powerful autobiography of growing up poor and black in rural Mississippi. Anne Moody was born into poverty in rural Wilkinson County Mississippi in 1940. She got her first job at 9 years old. A few weeks before she entered high school, Emmet Till was murdered a few towns down the road. "Before Emmet Till's murder, I had known the fear of hunger, hell, and the Devil. But now there was a new fear known to me--the fear of being killed just because I was black." "But show more I didn't know what one had to do or not do as a Negro not to be killed."
In high school she learned it was dangerous to even ask what the NAACP was. Nevertheless, after graduation she attended a black college and began participating in civil rights organizing activities. She participated in the first lunch counter sit-ins in Jackson, and she also participated in voter registration efforts. Her family begged her to stop her activities, telling her she was trying to get every Negro in her town murdered. Wilkinson County where she was born and raised was considered too "tough" at the time for organizers to tackle. Members of her family were in fact murdered, and she learned that she herself was on a KKK hit list.
She was at the rally after which Medgar Evers was assassinated. The book ends in 1964, when she is on a bus on the way to DC to attend Congressional hearings and attend a rally with Martin Luther King. The people on the bus are singing "We shall overcome," and Anne ends the book, "I WONDER. I REALLY WONDER." The book was written in 1968, when she was only 28. I finished the book hungering for more information about her life, and I learned a bit from Wikipedia, but unfortunately she did not write another book.
This book brought home to me in a way that was personal and visceral the dangers faced by those working in the civil rights movement in the south in the 1960's, and the atrocities of the Jim Crow era. I knew it was bad, but it was so much worse that I imagined, and I admire these heroes so much. Senator Ted Kennedy called it, "A history of our time seen from the bottom up." Everyone should read this book. show less
In high school she learned it was dangerous to even ask what the NAACP was. Nevertheless, after graduation she attended a black college and began participating in civil rights organizing activities. She participated in the first lunch counter sit-ins in Jackson, and she also participated in voter registration efforts. Her family begged her to stop her activities, telling her she was trying to get every Negro in her town murdered. Wilkinson County where she was born and raised was considered too "tough" at the time for organizers to tackle. Members of her family were in fact murdered, and she learned that she herself was on a KKK hit list.
She was at the rally after which Medgar Evers was assassinated. The book ends in 1964, when she is on a bus on the way to DC to attend Congressional hearings and attend a rally with Martin Luther King. The people on the bus are singing "We shall overcome," and Anne ends the book, "I WONDER. I REALLY WONDER." The book was written in 1968, when she was only 28. I finished the book hungering for more information about her life, and I learned a bit from Wikipedia, but unfortunately she did not write another book.
This book brought home to me in a way that was personal and visceral the dangers faced by those working in the civil rights movement in the south in the 1960's, and the atrocities of the Jim Crow era. I knew it was bad, but it was so much worse that I imagined, and I admire these heroes so much. Senator Ted Kennedy called it, "A history of our time seen from the bottom up." Everyone should read this book. show less
A marvelously intimate account of life for a young black girl/woman in Mississippi during the 1950s and 1960s. The sense of dread, terror, and overweening racism of Jim Crow Mississippi exists side by side with the ho-hum of lives accepted along the bottom of a racially stratified world. It is interesting to see the continuation of antebellum realities like interracial sexual liaisons with a somewhat different power dynamic involved--of course, continuing to work really in only one show more direction, white man to black woman.
Moody's description of the dreadful effects of all this on the lives, psyches, and attitudes of black men reminds us that undoing multiple generations of incredible damage is probably not the work of a day or a year or even a decade or two.
And yet, the author's courageous spirit, will, and commitment to herself, to reality, and to the truth suggests that once the impediments of policy are removed, there is little to hold back human character and ingenuity (at least externally). Anne Moody's world in the 1950s and 1960s was a world in tremendous flux and transition. It is remarkable to have such a view of it and for it hold up so remarkably well.
Also, interesting to see how historical events and actors play here--Dr. King, not very well; Kennedy, only in death; assassination of Medgar Evers and the Birmingham KKK attack that killed four little girls, grim inflection points.
If you've never looked into Civil Rights memoirs before, this is an excellent place to start, teeming as it is with the raw emotions of having recently survived as well as the excellent eye for details and interesting narration of a talented and capable writer. show less
Moody's description of the dreadful effects of all this on the lives, psyches, and attitudes of black men reminds us that undoing multiple generations of incredible damage is probably not the work of a day or a year or even a decade or two.
And yet, the author's courageous spirit, will, and commitment to herself, to reality, and to the truth suggests that once the impediments of policy are removed, there is little to hold back human character and ingenuity (at least externally). Anne Moody's world in the 1950s and 1960s was a world in tremendous flux and transition. It is remarkable to have such a view of it and for it hold up so remarkably well.
Also, interesting to see how historical events and actors play here--Dr. King, not very well; Kennedy, only in death; assassination of Medgar Evers and the Birmingham KKK attack that killed four little girls, grim inflection points.
If you've never looked into Civil Rights memoirs before, this is an excellent place to start, teeming as it is with the raw emotions of having recently survived as well as the excellent eye for details and interesting narration of a talented and capable writer. show less
Coming of Age in Mississippi: The Classic Autobiography of a Young Black Girl in the Rural South by Anne Moody
An awe-inspiring memoir of a young woman deeply involved with the Civil Rights campaign in some of the most dangerous counties in Mississippi. It's tempting to say that such atrocities happened in the past, until you stop to think that there are states that even now are doing their utmost to erase such stories as this from our schools, and from history. Unless we can own our past, we are assuredly doomed to repeat it.
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