In the middle of the Mississippi Delta lies rural, black-majority
Sunflower County. J. Todd Moye examines the social histories of
civil rights and white resistance movements in Sunflower, tracing
the development of organizing strategies in separate racial
communities over four decades.
Sunflower County was home to both James Eastland, one of the most
powerful reactionaries in the U.S. Senate in the twentieth century,
and Fannie Lou Hamer, the freedom-fighting sharecropper who rose to
national prominence as head of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic
Party. Sunflower was the birthplace of the Citizens' Council, the
white South's pre-eminent anti-civil rights organization, but it
was also a hotbed of SNCC (Student Nonviolent Coordinating
Committee) organizing and a fountainhead of freedom culture.
Using extensive oral history interviews and archival research, Moye
situates the struggle for democracy in Sunflower County within the
context of national developments in the civil rights movement.
Arguing that the civil rights movement cannot be understood as a
national monolith, Moye reframes it as the accumulation of
thousands of local movements, each with specific goals and
strategies. By continuing the analysis into the 1980s,
Let the
People Decide pushes the boundaries of conventional
periodization, recognizing the full extent of the civil rights
movement.