Login
Register
Home || Search || About us || Blog || Contact us || Other book sites

Name: Trouble in Mind

Author: Leon F. Litwack
Year: 1998
Rank:

Rating:

Original Rating:

Popularity: 1.1
Genres/categories: History, Non Fiction, Politics
Culture: African-American

Purchase/research links:
"The stain of Jim Crow runs deep in 20th-century America. . . . Its effects remain the nation's most pressing business. Trouble in Mind is an absolutely essential account of its dreadful history and calamitous legacy."  --The Washington Post

"The most complete and moving account we have had of what the victims of the Jim Crow South suffered and somehow endured."
--C. Vann Woodward

In April 1899, black laborer Sam Hose killed his white boss in self-defense. Wrongly accused of raping the man's wife, Hose was mutilated, stabbed, and burned alive in front of 2,000 cheering whites. His body was sold piecemeal to souvenir seekers; an Atlanta grocery displayed his knuckles in its front window for a week.

With the same narrative skill he brought to the Pulitzer Prize-winning Been in the Storm So Long, Leon Litwack constructs a searing history of life under Jim Crow. Drawing on new documentation and first-person accounts by blacks and whites, he describes the injustices--both institutional and personal--inflicted against a people. Here, too, are the black men and women whose activism, literature, and music preserved the genius of their human spirit. Painstakingly researched, important, and timely, Trouble in Mind recalls the bloodiest and most repressive period in the history of race relations in the United States--and the painful record of discrimination that haunts us to this day.

"Moving, elegant, earthy and pointed. . . . It forces us to reckon with the tragic legacies of freedom as well as of slavery. And it reminds us of the resilience and creativity of the human spirit."
--Steven Hahn, The San Diego Union-Tribune

"A chilling reminder of how simple it has been for Americans to delude themselves about the power of race."         --The Raleigh News & Observer
Similar books:

The Strange Career of Jim Crow
by C. Vann Woodward

Slavery by Another Name
by Douglas A. Blackmon

The Warmth of Other Suns
by Isabel Wilkerson

Worse Than Slavery
by David M. Oshinsky

The Promised Land
by Nicholas Lemann

Local People
by John Dittmer

The Race Beat
by Gene Roberts

Freedom Summer
by Bruce Watson

Been in the Storm So Long
by Leon F. Litwack

Sundown Towns
by James W. Loewen

Parting the Waters
by Taylor Branch

There Goes My Everything
by Jason Sokol

Ethnic America
by Thomas Sowell

Bound for Canaan
by Fergus M. Bordewich

Stamped from the Beginning
by Ibram X. Kendi

Eyewitness to America
by David Colbert

A People's History Of The United States
by Howard Zinn

Fire and Fury
by Michael Wolff

America
by Dinesh D'Souza

Unfreedom of the Press
by Mark R. Levin