Wayne Flynt
Born
in Potontoc, Mississippi, The United States
October 04, 1940
Genre
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Mockingbird Songs: My Friendship with Harper Lee
12 editions
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published
2017
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Afternoons with Harper Lee
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Poor but Proud: Alabama's Poor Whites
7 editions
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published
1989
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Alabama in the Twentieth Century
6 editions
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published
2004
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Keeping the Faith: Ordinary People, Extraordinary Lives
6 editions
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published
2011
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Dixie's Forgotten People, New Edition: The South's Poor Whites (Minorities in Modern America)
5 editions
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published
1979
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Alabama Baptists: Southern Baptists in the Heart of Dixie
6 editions
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published
1998
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Cracker Messiah, Governor Sidney J. Catts of Florida
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published
1977
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Montgomery: An Illustrated History : Sponsored by the Montgomery Area Chamber of Commerce
2 editions
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published
1980
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Mine, Mill & Microchip: A Chronicle of Alabama Enterprise
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published
1987
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“The most dramatic consequence of the new constitution [of 1901] was the one most desired by its drafters, the sudden and dramatic decline in voting. [...] What makes the 1901 suffrage provisions even more significant is comparison with the state's first constitution. Otherwise one might assume that the operative principle in Alabama public policy had always been anti-democratic. Actually, the opposite was true. The 1819 constitution, which ushered Alabama into the Union, was a projection of the towering presence of Thomas Jefferson and the democratic aspirations of the American Revolution. Delegates to that convention had pointedly refused to restrict suffrage based on literacy, ownership of property, or even church affiliation. Any white male 21 years of age or older could vote, whether or not he could read, write, owned property, belonged to a church or even believed in God. But the democratic assumptions of that first gathering of founding fathers at Huntsville in July 1819 were not shared by their successors in Montgomery in the summer of 1901.
Nor was the democratic assumption of Alabama's own past the only principle violated in 1901. So was the dominant democratic thrust of the 20th century both in America and throughout the world. It was the federal government and not the state of Alabama that enfranchised women in 1919. It was the Supreme Court that demanded that every vote count the same by compelling reapportionment after the Alabama legislature refused to do so for six decades. It was Congress in the 1965 Voting Rights Act that finally enfranchised Alabama blacks. And it was the U.S. Supreme Court in 1966 that ensured the right to vote for all the state's poor of whatever color when it struck down the poll tax. If the century-long wail for states' rights by Alabama's white elite struck many Americans as hollow and hypocritical, perhaps it was because that otherwise noble ideal for restricting tyranny was so often employed in Alabama on behalf of tyranny. For in Alabama, the constitution did not empower the people; it empowered the legislature. Without recall, initiative, referendum, or home rule, power was vested was vested in government, not in citizens. Democracy was forfeited to the federal Congress and to federal courts.”
― Alabama in the Twentieth Century
Nor was the democratic assumption of Alabama's own past the only principle violated in 1901. So was the dominant democratic thrust of the 20th century both in America and throughout the world. It was the federal government and not the state of Alabama that enfranchised women in 1919. It was the Supreme Court that demanded that every vote count the same by compelling reapportionment after the Alabama legislature refused to do so for six decades. It was Congress in the 1965 Voting Rights Act that finally enfranchised Alabama blacks. And it was the U.S. Supreme Court in 1966 that ensured the right to vote for all the state's poor of whatever color when it struck down the poll tax. If the century-long wail for states' rights by Alabama's white elite struck many Americans as hollow and hypocritical, perhaps it was because that otherwise noble ideal for restricting tyranny was so often employed in Alabama on behalf of tyranny. For in Alabama, the constitution did not empower the people; it empowered the legislature. Without recall, initiative, referendum, or home rule, power was vested was vested in government, not in citizens. Democracy was forfeited to the federal Congress and to federal courts.”
― Alabama in the Twentieth Century
Topics Mentioning This Author
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Around the World ...: Alabama | 5 | 162 | Jul 22, 2012 12:02PM | |
Reading Book Club: The Mysteries Of Harper Lee’s ‘Go Set A Watchman’ | 1 | 13 | Jul 15, 2015 08:34AM | |
On the Southern L...: Death of Harper Lee | 22 | 46 | Mar 17, 2016 05:44AM | |
SciFi and Fantasy...:
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2122 | 1430 | Dec 31, 2017 01:31PM | |
Gigi's Company: The Book Excerpt Game | 3288 | 192 | May 22, 2023 03:41AM |
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