Campus News

UGA Press to develop series based on MLK Collection

The University of Georgia Press and the Morehouse College Martin Luther King Jr. Collection will collaborate to develop a groundbreaking new series of books using the archives of the Morehouse MLK Collection, which includes nearly 10,000 items.

To be written by notable scholars of civil rights, race relations and American history and politics, the series will provide insightful overviews and fresh analyses of King’s intellectual, theological and activist engagement. A variety of themes will be covered, including poverty, the Vietnam War, capitalism, racial discrimination, nonviolence, education and civil rights.

The Morehouse MLK Collection represents a large portion of the Morehouse alumnus’s legacy, spanning the years between 1944 and 1968. Included are hundreds of handwritten notes, personal letters, famous and lesser-known speeches, manuscripts and sermons. Highlights include King’s 1964 Nobel Peace Prize lecture, his 1963 “Letter from Birmingham Jail,” and an early draft of his “I Have a Dream” speech. Of significance are the 1,100 books from King’s personal library, many annotated with handwritten notes.

Drawing upon this wealth of primary documents and source information, the series authors will examine King’s legacy as an activist, theologian, philosopher and political theoretician.

Viewing the collection through a 21st-century lens will illustrate how King’s words, vision and actions affected other movements and philosophies, and how others responded to and perceived his work, both during his life and after his assassination.

Walter Biggins, senior acquisitions editor at the University of Georgia Press, will work closely with a series advisory board and oversee acquisitions within the series.

“I’m so excited about the series because it situates King within the larger and never-ending struggle for human rights, and because it extends the promise and mission of his work into the present day,” Biggins said. “King should loom larger, and with more complexity, in the world as a result of the series’ groundbreaking work.”