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  • Diane McWhorter wrote in Carry Me Home that a 1963 Bill Hudson photo of a black protester being attacked by a police dog drove "international opinion to the side of the civil rights revolution"?

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Updated live from Wikipedia, last check: June 01, 2012 07:05 UTC (45 seconds ago)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Rebecca Diane McWhorter is an American journalist and commentator who has written extensively about race and the history of civil rights. She is the author of the Pulitzer Prize-winning Carry Me Home: Birmingham, Alabama, the Climactic Battle of the Civil Rights Revolution (Simon & Schuster, 2001)[1] and A Dream of Freedom, a young adult history of the civil rights movement (Scholastic, 2004). She is a long-time contributor to The New York Times and has written for the op-ed page of USA Today, Slate, and many other publications. She is originally from Birmingham, Alabama and now lives in New York City with her two children Isabel and Lucy.

She graduated from Wellesley College after attending The Brooke Hill School in Birmingham.

Diane McWhorter is a Holtzbrinck Fellow at the American Academy in Berlin, Germany, for Fall 2007.

References

  1. ^ "Pulitzer Prize Winners: General Non-Fiction" (web). pulitzer.org. http://www.pulitzer.org/. Retrieved 2008-03-14.  







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