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Book cover of Reporting Civil Rights: American Journalism 1941-1963, Vol. 1
United States History - African American History, African American History, Ethnic & Race Relations, Journalism, Civil & Human Rights, United States History - 20th Century - 1945 to 2000, Media & Communications

Reporting Civil Rights: American Journalism 1941-1963, Vol. 1

by Clayborne Carson (Compiler), David J. Garrow (Compiler), Carol Polsgrove (Compiler), Bill Kovach
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Overview

From A. Philip Randolph's defiant call in 1941 for African Americans to march on Washington to Alice Walker in 1973, Reporting Civil Rights presents firsthand accounts of the revolutionary events that overthrew segregation in the United States. This two-volume anthology brings together for the first time nearly 200 newspaper and magazine reports and book excerpts, and features 151 writers, including James Baldwin, Robert Penn Warren, David Halberstam, Lillian Smith, Gordon Parks, Murray Kempton, Ted Poston, Claude Sitton, and Anne Moody. A newly researched chronology of the movement, a 32-page insert of rare journalist photographs, and original biographical profiles are included in each volume

Roi Ottley and Sterling Brown record African American anger during World War II; Carl Rowan examines school segregation; Dan Wakefield and William Bradford Huie describe Emmett Till's savage murder; and Ted Poston provides a fascinating early portrait of Martin Luther King, Jr. In the early 1960s, John Steinbeck witnesses the intense hatred of anti-integration protesters in New Orleans; Charlayne Hunter recounts the hostility she faced at the University of Georgia; Raymond Coffey records the determination of jailed children in Birmingham; Russell Baker and Michael Thelwell cover the March on Washington; John Hersey and Alice Lake witness fear and bravery in Mississippi, while James Baldwin and Norman Podhoretz explore northern race relations.

Singly or together, Reporting Civil Rights captures firsthand the impassioned struggle for freedom and equality that transformed America.

Synopsis

From A. Philip Randolph's defiant call in 1941 for African Americans to march on Washington to Alice Walker in 1973, Reporting Civil Rights presents firsthand accounts of the revolutionary events that overthrew segregation in the United States. This two-volume anthology brings together for the first time nearly 200 newspaper and magazine reports and book excerpts, and features 151 writers, including James Baldwin, Robert Penn Warren, David Halberstam, Lillian Smith, Gordon Parks, Murray Kempton, Ted Poston, Claude Sitton, and Anne Moody. A newly researched chronology of the movement, a 32-page insert of rare journalist photographs, and original biographical profiles are included in each volume

Roi Ottley and Sterling Brown record African American anger during World War II; Carl Rowan examines school segregation; Dan Wakefield and William Bradford Huie describe Emmett Till's savage murder; and Ted Poston provides a fascinating early portrait of Martin Luther King, Jr. In the early 1960s, John Steinbeck witnesses the intense hatred of anti-integration protesters in New Orleans; Charlayne Hunter recounts the hostility she faced at the University of Georgia; Raymond Coffey records the determination of jailed children in Birmingham; Russell Baker and Michael Thelwell cover the March on Washington; John Hersey and Alice Lake witness fear and bravery in Mississippi, while James Baldwin and Norman Podhoretz explore northern race relations.

Singly or together, Reporting Civil Rights captures firsthand the impassioned struggle for freedom and equality that transformed America.

The New York Times

This is a massive, two-volume collection of nearly 200 essays, manifestoes, news stories, speeches and, above all, eyewitness accounts by 151 writers, arranged chronologically, from 1941 to 1973. Given their grab-bag texture, the books make unexpectedly gripping reading. On the one hand, you already know what's going to happen, at least with the major events — Brown v. Board of Education, Rosa Parks and the Montgomery bus boycott, the passage of the 1964 Civil Rights and 1965 Voting Rights Acts, the murders of Medgar Evers, Emmett Till, Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr. At the same time, the datelined immediacy of these dispatches makes clear, in a way that even the best historical writing cannot, the shocks and disjunctions, the uncertainty that surrounded each moment of since-consecrated struggle and even some of the other ways that things might have turned out. — William Finnegan

About the Author, Clayborne Carson

The advisory board for Reporting Civil Rights includes Clayborne Carson, senior editor, The Papers of Martin Luther King, Jr.; David J. Garrow, Presidential Distinguished Professor, Emory University; William Kovach, chairman, Committee of Concerned Journalists; and Carol Polsgrove, professor of journalism, Indiana University.

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Editorials

The New York Times

This is a massive, two-volume collection of nearly 200 essays, manifestoes, news stories, speeches and, above all, eyewitness accounts by 151 writers, arranged chronologically, from 1941 to 1973. Given their grab-bag texture, the books make unexpectedly gripping reading. On the one hand, you already know what's going to happen, at least with the major events β€” Brown v. Board of Education, Rosa Parks and the Montgomery bus boycott, the passage of the 1964 Civil Rights and 1965 Voting Rights Acts, the murders of Medgar Evers, Emmett Till, Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr. At the same time, the datelined immediacy of these dispatches makes clear, in a way that even the best historical writing cannot, the shocks and disjunctions, the uncertainty that surrounded each moment of since-consecrated struggle and even some of the other ways that things might have turned out. β€” William Finnegan

Publishers Weekly

In time for the 40th anniversary of the March on Washington, the Library of America is publishing a landmark collection of civil rights reporting in America, Reporting Civil Rights. The two-volume work is at once a testament to our country's First Amendment rights, and a somber yet inspiring portrait of oppression. The editorial advisory board, which includes Clayborne Carson, David J. Garrow, Bill Kovach and Carol Posgrove, has chosen pieces that span from 1941, when blacks struggled for equal treatment in the Army, to 1973, when, writes Alice Walker, "freedom [was] still an elusive tease, and in the very act of grabbing for it one [could] become shackled." Among the treasures here are Langston Hughes's 1945 recollection of eating in dining cars south of the Mason-Dixon line; a 1963 piece by Hunter S. Thompson on Louisville, Ky. ("a Southern city with Northern problems"); and John Hersey's 1964 article from The Saturday Evening Post about a black man who tries to register to vote. There are nearly 200 newspaper and magazine reports, book excerpts and features in each volume. B&w photos. Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

Library Journal

These new editions cover the American Civil Rights Movement from 1941 through 1973. In the tradition of the publisher's superb Reporting Vietnam: American Journalism, 1959-1975, the volumes present newspaper and magazine articles from the popular and African American press. Volume 1 opens with an appeal in the May 1941 Black Worker calling for a protest march on Washington, DC, that July. The second volume closes with Alice Walker's 1973 "Staying Home in Mississippi" from the New York Times Magazine. In between, we experience race riots in World War II, the Montgomery bus boycott, the rise of Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X, the Watts riots, gains in obtaining voting and civil rights, and failures to obtain greater economic and social equality. The 151 writers whose works are collected here include Ralph Ellison, Langston Hughes, John Hersey, Robert Penn Warren, David Halberstam, Jimmy Breslin, James Baldwin, Marshall Frady, and Tom Wolfe. Reading their articles brings alive the tastes, sounds, textures, and emotions of this tumultuous and epic period in American life. Each volume also contains a chronology and biographical sketches of the contributors. Recommended for all libraries.-Stephen L. Hupp, West Virginia Univ., Parkersburg Copyright 2003 Cahners Business Information.

Book Details

Published
January 1, 2003
Publisher
Library of America
Pages
996
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9781931082280

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