Host Sea Stachura and editor Keocia Howard look back on the making of "Shots in the Back: Exhuming the 1970 Augusta Riot."
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30:25
Episode 6: Was The Augusta Riot Worth It?
Was the Augusta riot worth it? Fifty years after the uprising, we look at the societal changes that it sparked, and what the Civil Rights Movement looks like today.
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47:36
Bonus: No Peace, No Justice, 1970
In 1970, what happened in Augusta was actually part of a larger national story as campuses across the country were shut down due to protests.
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7:26
Episode 5: The Smoke Clears
In the months following Augusta's riot, activism was at an all-time high. As white Augustans braced themselves for the possibility of more violence, Black activists worked for more immediate change. Meanwhile, the police department rewarded the officers involved in the riot, and the friends and families of "The Augusta Six" demanded justice.
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46:14
Bonus: All Cakes Should Be Equal
Students from the Jessye Norman School of the Arts have been working hard to tell the story of the 1970 Augusta riot in the podcast, Shots in the Back. Half of these students are white, while the rest are Black. That dynamic has made it intimidating to talk about racism in the classroom. In this bonus episode, several of them share their fears about racism.
À propos de Shots in the Back: Exhuming the 1970 Augusta Riot
"Shots in the Back: Exhuming the 1970 Augusta Riot" tells the story of one of the first major Civil Rights Era riots in the South. The immediate cause of the riot in Augusta, Ga. was the brutal murder of Charles Oatman, an African American teenager held by police in the county jail. During the riot, six Black men were killed by white police officers, all of them shot in the back. In a collaboration, students at the Jessye Norman School of the Arts join GPB in telling this story.
Écoutez Shots in the Back: Exhuming the 1970 Augusta Riot, Storiavoce, un podcast d'Histoire & Civilisations ou d'autres podcasts du monde entier - avec l'app de radio.fr