Attention: This page is designed using recognized Web standards. You are seeing this message because your browser does not support those standards. You will have full access to the content of this page, but it will look much better if you use a recent browser such as Internet Explorer 7.x (Windows), or Mozilla Firefox (Windows/Mac). Learn more...


Common Reading

The common reading of the IU Southeast Common Experience for 2006-07 is Coming of Age in Mississippi by Anne Moody. The well-known autobiography of civil-rights activist Anne Moody will allow a discussion of all kinds of issues related to the theme “Citizens making a difference in America. ”Discussions of the turbulent modern civil rights era in America as well as issues related to citizenship, civic responsibility, and citizen engagement will be prominent over the course of the academic year and we encourage all of you – students, faculty, and staff at IU Southeast and people from the local communities of Indiana and Kentucky – to join us in not only reading this important memoir of and witness to the civil rights era but also in discussing the book!!

Download the Common Reading Study Guide for Coming of Age in Mississippi by Anne Moody.
Note: This file is in PDF format. You must have Adobe Acrobat Reader to view it.

Below is a review of the Common Experience reading taken from 500 Great Books by Women.The review is written by Erica Bauermeister.

Blunt, powerful, and angry, Coming of Age in Mississippi dares the reader to find anything poetic in the lives of black people living in rural Mississippi in the 1940s and 50s, "where they knew, as I knew, the price you pay daily for being black." Anne Moody begins with her childhood - houses papered with newspaper, children left alone because parents have to work, her own after-school housecleaning jobs that begin at the age of nine so she can help her family eat. Smart and athletic, she earns scholarships through college, but her thoughts are increasingly consumed by the racism that surrounds her. She is one of the original protestors at the Woolworth's counter in Jackson; after college she helps lead a voter registration drive in rural Canton, Mississippi, "where Negroes frequently turned up dead." She describes finding her own name on a Klan "wanted" list, seeing a boy beaten as FBI agents watch from across the street, hearing of murders - Emmet Till, Medgar Evars, John F. Kennedy, her own uncle. She lives her life knowing she can no longer return safely to her hometown and feeling estranged from family members who do not share her passionate commitment to fight racism. She is easy on no one, not even Martin Luther King, whose nonviolent stance she eventually questions. Anne Moody's book, written when she was twenty-eight, is both proof of her convictions and a forthright testament to the sacrifices, terror, and courage that made up the U.S. Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s.

If you have any questions concerning the IU Southeast Common Experience, please contact Professor Cliff Staten.