Zora Neale Hurston And The Civil Rights Movement

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Because Alice lived in an environment with racism and poverty she wrote with passion for gender issues. When given a scholarship to Sarah Lawrence College, she became one of a few young black students to attend the prestigious school. Alice involved herself with many civil rights demonstrations and was later invited to the home of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Alice contributed to a feminist magazine contributed to in the late 60s, writing a piece about the work of an unappreciated African-American author named Zora Neale Hurston. After Alice’s experience in the Civil Rights Movement she wrote her first collection of poetry fighting for equality for all African Americans in the late 1960s. Alice published her first novel, The Third Life of Grange

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