

Instead, her participation in the civil rights movement expanded when she began to challenge the myths, authorities, false heirs of superiority and assumptions in the society. She never became satisfied from or accustomed to the mandated subordination due to the white people in the US.

She did not allow anyone to dominate her and did not accept being an inferior African American woman to any white person or men.


In the same year, Moody also took part in a march on Washington DC (, 2010).Īs Moody learned that she was both an African American and a woman, she was quick to adapt to the situations which would have been fatal. She was one of the three youngsters in 1963 who staged a sit-in at a segregated Woolworth’s lunch counter in Jackson. Anne Moody became an activist in the civil rights movement while she was at Tugaloo College and maintained involvement with CORE, NAACP and SNCC. She won basketball scholarship at junior college and an academic scholarship to Tugaloo College from where she graduated in 1964. Moody started to work in the fourth grade as she was the eldest in her siblings and her mother could not earn much for the nine children. Change in Moody’s Perspectives about the Movement Overtime She was active throughout her college life which forced her to work for the independence of women from discrimination and get them voting rights, to create a history for the Southerners and give the African Americans the freedom they deserve and await (, 2010). Being and African American and moreover a female, she experienced a lot of discrimination and racism herself. Anne witnessed a lot of discrimination against women and the African Americans in the area where she lived since her childhood. Moody attended a segregated school in Centreville in which she seemed to be a bright student despite her impoverished conditions. Moody’s mother supported her nine children through restaurant work and domestic chores. Her father left the family when she and her other 8 siblings were still very young.
