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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -- Dr. Kari Frederickson, assistant
professor of history at The University of Alabama, was named the
2002 Harry S. Truman Book Award winner for her work, "The
Dixiecrat Revolt and the End of the Solid South, 1932-1968"
(The University of North Carolina Press, 2001).
The Harry S. Truman Book Award of $1,000 recognizes the best
book written in a two-year period that deals primarily and
substantially with some aspect of the history of the United
States between April 12, 1945 and Jan. 20, 1953, or with the
public career of Harry S. Truman. The award is given biennially
in even-numbered years by the Harry S. Truman Library Institute
for National and International Affairs.
"We were impressed with this book on many fronts,"
said Dr. Jeffrey Gall, chair of the Harry S. Truman Book Award
subcommittee and assistant professor of history and M.A.E.
director for social science at Truman State University.
"To begin with, Frederickson is an excellent writer who
tells a compelling story. She begins her account in the 1930s
and has a closing section that takes her conclusions into the
late 1960s. The heart of her book focuses squarely on the Truman
era and the pivotal attempt of the Dixiecrats to use a third
part campaign to throw the 1948 election into the House of
Representatives and thus get a president with whom they would be
more satisfied ... it is worth noting that one of our committee
members remarked, 'of all the finalists, this is the book that
will impact the way I teach period'," Gall said.
Frederickson received her doctorate from Rutgers University;
she currently teaches courses on the modern South at UA. She
lives in Tuscaloosa with her husband and daughter.
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