This page was created by Paul Merchant, Jr.. 

Journal of e-Media Studies, Volume 7 Issue 2: Accessible Civil Rights Heritage

Barth Abstract

The Little Rock Central High Crisis of 1957-59 resulted in the school’s desegregation following a showdown between the federal and state governments. How the events that compose the Crisis have been remembered has shifted across the six and a half decades since they occurred. The distinctive media collection held by the David and Barbara Pryor Center for Arkansas Oral and Visual History at the University of Arkansas provides documentary evidence of these alterations in the telling of the Central High story. That shift in political memory has played out in three acts and has involved a refocusing of the events away from the legal and political battles that played out in the Little Rock Crisis to the establishment of Little Rock Central High as a model of successful integration to the ramifications of the Crisis on the lives of the nine youngsters whose lives were impacted by it.

This page is referenced by: