![]() ![]() Hoose's evenhanded account investigates Colvin's motives and influences, and carefully establishes the historical context so that readers can appreciate both Colvin's maturity and bravery and the boycott leadership's pragmatism. Because Colvin had been tearful in the period following her 1955 conviction, when her classmates shunned her, she was deemed too “emotional” to place at the center of the bus boycott by the time Parks assumed that position, Colvin was disgraced: pregnant but not married. ) introduces readers to a resolute and courageous teenager and explores the politics of the NAACP and bus-boycott leadership. ![]() Investigating Colvin's actions, asking why Rosa Parks's role has overshadowed Colvin's, Hoose ( We Were There, Too! Young People in U.S. ![]() , a landmark case in which Montgomery's segregated bus system was declared unconstitutional. ![]() In March 1955, nine months before Rosa Parks triggered the bus boycott in Montgomery, Ala., by refusing to surrender her seat to a white passenger, a 15-year-old Montgomery girl, Claudette Colvin, let herself be arrested and dragged off the bus for the same reason in 1956, Colvin was one of four plaintiffs in Browder ![]()
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