Walk on By: How We Know an Era Is Over DennisDavid J.Jr., in collaboration with DennisDavid J.Sr. (2022). The Movement Made Us: A Father, a Son, and the Legacy of a Freedom Ride. New York: Harper. 288 pp., archival material, $27.99 cloth, $18.99 paperback, $12.49 e-book.MantlerGordon K. (2023). The Multiracial Promise: Harold Washington’s Chicago and the Democratic Struggle in Reagan’s America. Chapel Hill: UNC Press. 353 pp., illustrations, bibliography, notes, index, $99.00 cloth, $29.95 paperback, $22.99 e-book.WolcottVictoria W. (2022). Living in the Future: Utopianism and the Long Civil Rights Movement. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. 272 pp., illustrations, table, map, bibliography, notes, index, $30 cloth, $29.99 e-book, $9.99 mp3.

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2025-07

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social movements, Black freedom movement, civil rights, twentieth-century United States, periodization

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10.1177/00961442241246055

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Hogan, Wesley (2025). Walk on By: How We Know an Era Is Over DennisDavid J.Jr., in collaboration with DennisDavid J.Sr. (2022). The Movement Made Us: A Father, a Son, and the Legacy of a Freedom Ride. New York: Harper. 288 pp., archival material, $27.99 cloth, $18.99 paperback, $12.49 e-book.MantlerGordon K. (2023). The Multiracial Promise: Harold Washington’s Chicago and the Democratic Struggle in Reagan’s America. Chapel Hill: UNC Press. 353 pp., illustrations, bibliography, notes, index, $99.00 cloth, $29.95 paperback, $22.99 e-book.WolcottVictoria W. (2022). Living in the Future: Utopianism and the Long Civil Rights Movement. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. 272 pp., illustrations, table, map, bibliography, notes, index, $30 cloth, $29.99 e-book, $9.99 mp3. Journal of Urban History, 51(4). pp. 951–959. 10.1177/00961442241246055 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/34333.

This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.

Scholars@Duke

Hogan

Wesley Hogan

Research Professor of the John Hope Franklin Humanities Institute

Wesley Hogan is a Research Professor at the Franklin Humanities Institute and History. Between 2003-2013, she taught at Virginia State University, where she worked with the Algebra Project and the Young People’s Project. Between 2013-2021, she served as Director of the Center for Documentary Studies. She writes and teaches the history of youth social movements, human rights, documentary, and oral history. Her most recent book, On the Freedom Side, draws a portrait of young people organizing in the spirit of Ella Baker since 1960. In July 2021, a book she and Paul Ortiz co-edited was released, People Power: History, Organizing, and Larry Goodwyn’s Democratic Vision in the Twenty-First Century.  She co-facilitates a partnership between the SNCC Legacy Project and Duke, The SNCC Digital Gateway, whose purpose is to bring the grassroots stories of the civil rights movement to a much wider public through a web portal, K12 initiative, and set of critical oral histories. With Drs. Beverly Gray and Jonas Swartz, she leads a Reproductive Care Post-Roe Bass Connections team that produces the Abortion Care Today audio archive.


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