Wednesday, February 15, 2017

Book Review: Loving vs. Virginia by Patricia Hruby Powell, Shadra Strickland


Loving vs. VirginiaHistorical events are often lost on our youth because they are unconcerned with our pasts, but only worried about their social media status and the last selfie they posted on Instagram. It is a challenge to teach the past without merely assigning pages to be read from a text and giving a lecture. Patricia Hurby Powell and Shadra Strickland have created a Documentary of the Landmark Civil Rights Case of Loving vs. Virginia in a new and fresh way; the story is told in poetic form while incorporating text from Newspapers, quotes from Civil Rights leaders and illustrations of what life was like in the 1950s. Loving vs. Virginia: A Documentary Novel of the Landmark Civil Rights Case also changes perspectives from Mildred (Millie) Jeter and Richard Loving throughout the nine years of their relationship. This black woman and white man fell in love, had children, but could not live together in the state of Virginia. When they chose to do this, they were convicted, sentenced and fined. Forced from their home in Virginia to live in Washington D.C. were they were free from persecution.

Although the Emancipation Proclamation passed more than 100 years prior to Loving vs. Virginia,  desegregation was still a problem in the United States and a marriage of the Lovings' was scandalous. As a public we know of the freedom riders, the sit-ins and the March on Washington, but the case of Loving vs. Virginia did not get as much news time. Marriage should be for those who fall in love and want to share in a union with one another; marriage is not to be determined by the states as was argued in this particular case. Each chapter brought a new date and changed perspective offering its audience a perspective of the hurt, embarrassment and anguish these two endured all for love.

In the Classroom:                                                                    
In the Social Studies/History classroom: Give several days worth of classroom lectures over a time period Unit. Once you have let several days pass, and have several lectures complete, have your students create an acrostic poem using one of the events which happened during the time period. They must use specific examples including dates, places and people. This is a simple poem, and depending on your English teacher, you could co-teach this unit together assigning multiple poems each with a different type of poetry used.