Description

Known most prominently as a daring anti-lynching crusader, Ida B. Wells-Barnett (1862-1931) worked tirelessly throughout her life as a political advocate for the rights of women, minorities, and members of the working class. Despite her significance, until the 1970s Wells-Barnett’s life, career, and legacy were relegated to the footnotes of history. Beginning with the posthumously published autobiography edited and released by her daughter Alfreda in 1970, a handful of biographers and historians—most notably, Patricia Schechter, Paula Giddings, Mia Bay, Gail Bederman, and Jinx Broussard—have begun to place the life of Wells-Barnett within the context of the social, cultural, and political milieu of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. This edited volume seeks to extend the discussions that they have cultivated over the last five decades and to provide insight into the communication strategies that the political advocate turned to throughout the course of her life as a social justice crusader. In particular, scholars such as Schechter, Broussard, and many more will weigh in on the full range of communication techniques—from lecture circuits and public relations campaigns to investigative and advocacy journalism—that Wells-Barnett employed to combat racism and sexism and to promote social equity; her dual career as a journalist and political agitator; her advocacy efforts on an international, national, and local level; her own failed political ambitions; her role as a bridge and interloper in key social movements of the nineteenth and twentieth century; her legacy in American culture; and her potential to serve as a prism through which to educate others on how to address lingering forms of oppression in the twenty-first century.

Table of Contents

Foreword: Ida & Me: A Call to Performance
Chandra D. Snell Clark

Introduction
Lori Amber Roessner & Jodi L. Rightler-McDaniels

Part I: Ida B. Wells & “The Strange Career” of a Political Pioneer of the Press: Communicating a Social Justice Crusade

Chapter 1: Training the Pen: Ida B. Wells' Journalistic Efforts to Combat Emerging Jim-Crow Laws in Transportation
Norma Fay Green

Chapter 2: “A Hearing in the Press”: Ida B. Wells' Lecture Tour of 1893-4
Joe Hayden

Chapter 3: Communicating an Anti-Lynching Crusade: The Voice, the Writings, and the Power of Ida B. Wells-Barnett's Public Relations Campaign
Jinx Coleman Broussard

Chapter 4: “The Modern Joan [of] Arc”: Press Coverage of Ida B. Wells-Barnett's Campaign for Woman's Suffrage
Lori Amber Roessner

Chapter 5: The Life of a Political Agitator: Ida B. Wells-Barnett's Transition from a National Activist to a Local Reformer
Kris DuRocher

Part II: Mightier than the Sword: Discourse on the Life & Legacy of Ida B. Wells-Barnett

Ch

Product details

Published Jul 31 2018
Format Ebook (PDF)
Edition 1st
Extent 1
ISBN 9781978793163
Imprint Lexington Books
Illustrations 5 b/w photos;
Series Women in American Political History
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing
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Environment: Staging