Immagine dell'autore.
8+ opere 463 membri 6 recensioni

Sull'Autore

Raymond Arsenault is John Hope Franklin Professor of Southern History at the University of South Florida, St. Petersburg.
Fonte dell'immagine: Uncredited photo at University of South Florida - St. Petersburg website

Opere di Raymond Arsenault

Opere correlate

American Experience: Freedom Riders [2011 TV episode] (2010) — Original book — 30 copie

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Nome canonico
Arsenault, Raymond
Nome legale
Arsenault, Raymond Ostby
Data di nascita
1948-01-06
Sesso
male
Nazionalità
USA
Istruzione
Brandeis University (PhD|1981)
Attività lavorative
historian
university professor
Organizzazioni
University of South Florida

Utenti

Recensioni

The Publisher Says: The first full-length biography of civil rights hero and congressman John Lewis

For six decades John Robert Lewis (1940–2020) was a towering figure in the U.S. struggle for civil rights. As an activist and progressive congressman, he was renowned for his unshakable integrity, indomitable courage, and determination to get into “good trouble.”

In this first book-length biography of Lewis, Raymond Arsenault traces Lewis’s upbringing in rural Alabama, his activism as a Freedom Rider and leader of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, his championing of voting rights and anti-poverty initiatives, and his decades of service as the “conscience of Congress.”

Both in the streets and in Congress, Lewis promoted a philosophy of nonviolence to bring about change. He helped the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr. and other civil rights leaders plan the 1963 March on Washington, where he spoke at the Lincoln Memorial. Lewis’s activism led to repeated arrests and beatings, most notably when he suffered a skull fracture in Selma, Alabama, during the 1965 police attack later known as Bloody Sunday. He was instrumental in the passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, and in Congress he advocated for racial and economic justice, immigration reform, LGBTQ rights, and national health care.

Arsenault recounts Lewis’s lifetime of work toward one overarching realizing the “beloved community,” an ideal society based in equity and inclusion. Lewis never wavered in this pursuit, and even in death his influence endures, inspiring mobilization and resistance in the fight for social justice.

I RECEIVED A DRC FROM THE PUBLISHER VIA NETGALLEY. THANK YOU.

My Review
: Almost six hundred pages. That is a lot of reading time. It is also, peculiarly enough, less than I would have liked it to be because the life of Representative Lewis took place in such interesting times, and among such towering figures of US history, that I would gladly have read more.

Most all my readers know I am a committed atheist, and either know or can guess why. It is people like John Lewis, who used their christian beliefs to leave the world a better, more equitable place for as many as he could advocate for, that make me especially bitter about the sleazy rotten souled creeps who embody my idea of christians and christianity. Lewis was such a committed christian that he, the victim of a violent attack by a racist who later regretted his actions and sought forgiveness from Lewis, referred to the man as his brother in a television appearance they made together. This is a prime example of what a friend of Lewis’s called his "moral jujitsu," a means of wrong-footing the hate-spewing opponents who confidently expected him to return fire.

Author Arsenault sites Lewis in his historical milieu with thorough, fully attributed research. He has relied on personal sources who knew him. Thus they, who were there, can give him the real flavor of a Jim Crow rural Alabama upbringing, one filled with the ritual humiliations and deprivations so beloved of our scumbag brethren the white nationalists. While this did radicalize young Lewis, his christian beliefs channeled his radicalism into a serach for justice, fairness, equitability, and all achieved without the rage and hate that marked his opponents. Admirable to me, and to generations of voters who returned him to Congress for much of his adult life.

His skills as a politician were honed in the arena of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, which he was instrumental in forming and from whom he broke away after they began calling for "Black Power," which he saw as provocative and counterproductive with its inherent message of conflict. Lewis opposed the simple reductive sloganeering of the Civil Rights Movement in its post-MLK era. This was, after all, one of the folk who thought they would be murdered in public on Bloody Sunday, in a protest on a bridge now named after him.

What that pointed to was a fact that I, no scholar of Representative Lewis’s life and career, had never known or even considered: John Lewis was not uniformly admired among his colleagues because he favored the cause of human rights over narrowly construed civil rights. He was, for example, taken to task for his vocal opposition to the confirmation of the Supreme Court’s first Black justice, Clarence Thomas...and how right he was about that! He was also a QUILTBAG ally in a community that does not, as a rule, support gay rights...at least not publicly. He very much did, and also supported the ongoing Jewish struggle against antisemitism.

John Lewis emerges from this telling of his life’s story as a man of high principles and powerful moral certainty. It did not make him universally loved, in fact made him a figure of hatred for many, but it gave him the grace of convictions not merely held, but lived. I hope you will spend some hours with John Lewis’s spirit by reading Author Arsennault’s wonderful telling of it. There are illustrative images in the text that enrich the older reader’s memory of the times he helped shape. It is a life worth knowing more about lived in times we still feel reverberations of...though not as positive a feedback as I myownself would prefer.
… (altro)
1 vota
Segnalato
richardderus | Jan 15, 2024 |
A long and comprehensive of Arthur Ashe's life, on and off the court. I thought I knew a lot about him; I didn't. I thought he won many more championships over more years than he did. So perhaps I knew more about him because of his activism and health issues after he actually retired from tennis. It is pretty well-written, and heavily footnoted, citing many sources and interviews. I did read some of the chapters more cursorily than others. I really enjoyed getting to "know" him better, and especially how his views on becoming involved in political issues and activism evolved. He was like most, or many, of us in that regard--our views change over time as we become more knowledgeable. He is one of the greats.… (altro)
½
 
Segnalato
cherybear | Jun 18, 2020 |
An excellent re-telling of this era and a good reminder of the struggle. So glad I read it.
 
Segnalato
beebeereads | Feb 11, 2017 |
Interesting and well-written but I think some of the detail of her early career and some of the background information on black performers who preceded her could have been cut. I did learn a lot. It's a fascinating story which says a lot about America and I would recommend it to foreigners trying to understand the US. One problem is I did not get a sense of Marian Anderson as a person, which the author admits as a problem.
 
Segnalato
atiara | 1 altra recensione | Apr 29, 2011 |

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Opere
8
Opere correlate
1
Utenti
463
Popolarità
#53,109
Voto
4.2
Recensioni
6
ISBN
31

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