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

Monk-Payton Abstract

This essay examines the archival collection in the Walter J. Brown Media Archive and Peabody Awards Collection at the University of Georgia. In particular, newsfilm footage from Atlanta-based station WSB-TV during the civil rights movement intervenes in the national narrative that the city was “too busy to hate.” Through close reading and annotating select pieces of newsfilm during the 1960s, I analyze the mundane visuality of civic activism and the role of the unspectacular in sociopolitical unrest. Looking at the ecology of direct action that emerges in urban encounters between various constituencies (black and white students, business owners, bystanders, and government officials), the essay documents a kind of anticipatory witnessing that reframes archival possibility for protest.

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