Skip to main content
Presentation
Martin Luther King Jr. Day and the Politics of Race
Boise State - Beyond the Blue Faculty Podcasts (2011)
  • Jill K. Gill, Boise State University
Abstract
The last few states to adopt the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday were largely non-southern, overwhelmingly white, and rural. Gill explores the political process by which one of these, Idaho, in 1990 became the 46th state to claim the holiday. In a conservative libertarian-leaning state with no significant non-white voting bloc and a weak understanding of King’s historical significance, politicians saw little need for the holiday until the Aryan Nations’ violent white-supremacist actions hurt the state’s image. Ironically, the Aryan Nations became Idaho’s “Bull Connor,” not only shaming the state into creating King Day, but schooling it in the pertinence of King’s movement, vision, and methods.
Disciplines
Publication Date
October 21, 2011
Citation Information
Jill K. Gill. "Martin Luther King Jr. Day and the Politics of Race" Boise State - Beyond the Blue Faculty Podcasts (2011)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/jill_gill/19/