Radical Volunteers offers the first comprehensive account of student activism in Tennessee. It is grounded in excellent archival research and brimming with insights into the struggle for racial justice, peace, and student power in a conservative state, whose leadership was often hostile to all those causes. Ballantyne's study makes a major contribution to our understanding of the South, higher education, and student protests in 1960s America, and ranks among the best of a new wave of historical studies attesting that the campus unrest of the Long '60s extended far beyond Berkeley, Columbia, and the other famed hotbeds of student radicalism.