Grant, Joanne

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BIOGHIST REQUIRED Joanne Grant, born in 1930 in Ithaca, New York to a biracial mother and white father, graduated from Syracuse University with a degree in history and journalism. At 27, Grant traveled throughout the Soviet Union and China, defying state bans on travel to Communist countries, seeking alternatives to an American political system that perpetuated segregation and class divides. Grant was deeply interested in finding organizing and mobilizing tools through which to address the racial and economic inequities of American democracy. Upon her return, the young journalist briefly assisted W.E.B. DuBois, noted black scholar, intellectual, and activist. DuBois, who had left the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), an organization he had founded, as the leadership became more mainstream, sought increasingly more radical alliances for his activism. Undoubtedly, DuBois' mounting frustrations with the unfulfilled promises of equality through integration and his profound interest in creating international Communist alliances, influenced Grant.

BIOGHIST REQUIRED With DuBois' referral, Grant took a position as a journalist at the Leftist New York weekly The National Guardian in 1960 and traveled throughout the South to detail Civil Rights struggles for the paper, writing on Freedom Summer, the Citizenship School movement, marches and voter registration drives. Her reporting connected to her to the folks of the Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), a militant student organization that used direct action to protest segregation, and to SNCC's founder, Ella Baker. Baker, who had gotten her start as an activist in the NAACP some twenty-five years before, had persuaded Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. to hold a college conference in 1960, on the heels of sporadic youth action to desegregate college campuses. The symposium birthed SNCC, and Baker left the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) to become the young organization's advisor. Impressed by the expansive direct action program SNCC was implementing, Grant joined the organization, both as a journalist and activist. Her journalism for The Guardian provided a platform for SNCC to publicize their work and the repressive responses of politicians, law enforcement and white citizens.

BIOGHIST REQUIRED She married Victor Rabinowitz in 1967, a New York lawyer and activist who defended many Leftist organizations throughout the various freedom struggles of the 1960s including leaders of the Weather Underground, SNCC, and high-profile communists. Grant's experiences with SNCC and the Black freedom movement informed her comprehensive document- based history of the black struggle against oppression entitled Black Protest: 350 Years of History, Documents, and Analyses (New York: Fawcett, 1968). Her involvement with SNCC also led her to cover and participate in the student uprisings at Columbia University in 1968. The result was her history and analysis of the strike in Confrontation on Campus: The Columbia Pattern for the New Protest . Evident in her writings is Ms. Grant's overwhelming desire to find new means through which to fight oppression and inequality within the American democratic system.

BIOGHIST REQUIRED Grant and Rabinowitz traveled extensively, including a trip to Cuba where Grant charmed Castro into allowing them to accompany the Cuban president on a leg of a speaking tour throughout the country. Her later work, a film entitled Fundi (1981) and later book, Ella Baker: Freedom Bound (New York: Wiley, 1998), were both dedicated to exploring the life and grassroots activism of SNCC founder Ella Baker.

From the guide to the Joanne Grant Research Files, 1963-1968., (Columbia University. Rare Book and Manuscript Library, University Archives)

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
referencedIn Ella Baker papers, 1926-1986 Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture. Rare Books, Manuscripts, and Archives Section
referencedIn J. B. Matthews Papers, 1862-1986 and undated David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library
creatorOf Joanne Grant Research Files, 1963-1968. Columbia University. Rare Book and Manuscript Library
referencedIn Sally Belfrage Papers, Bulk, 1960-1990, 1903-1994, (Bulk 1960-1990) Tamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives
Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
associatedWith Baker, Ella, 1903-1986 person
associatedWith Belfrage, Sally, 1936- person
associatedWith Black Panther Party. corporateBody
associatedWith College students corporateBody
associatedWith Columbia-Barnard Citizenship Council. corporateBody
associatedWith Columbia Spectator. corporateBody
associatedWith Columbia University corporateBody
associatedWith Columbia University Student Coordinating Committee. corporateBody
associatedWith Committee for the Defense of Property Rights. corporateBody
associatedWith Community Action Committee. corporateBody
associatedWith December Fourth Movement. corporateBody
associatedWith Employees for March 25th. corporateBody
associatedWith Faculty Peace Action Committee. corporateBody
associatedWith Kirk, Grayson L. (Grayson Louis), 1903- person
associatedWith Matthews, J. B. (Joseph Brown), 1894-1966 person
associatedWith Morningside Housing Committee. corporateBody
associatedWith Progressive Labor Party. corporateBody
associatedWith Radical Faculty Group. corporateBody
associatedWith Rudd, Mark. person
associatedWith Student Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam a.k.a. SMC. corporateBody
associatedWith Student Mobilization Committee (U.S.). corporateBody
associatedWith Students for a Democratic Society (U.S.). corporateBody
associatedWith Students for a Free Campus. corporateBody
associatedWith Students for a Reconstructed University a.k.a. SRU. corporateBody
Place Name Admin Code Country
Subject
Civil rights movements
Occupation
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