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A Refugee From His Race Albion W Tourge And His Fight Against White Supremacy Carolyn L Karcher

  • SKU: BELL-6857816
A Refugee From His Race Albion W Tourge And His Fight Against White Supremacy Carolyn L Karcher
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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A Refugee From His Race Albion W Tourge And His Fight Against White Supremacy Carolyn L Karcher instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of North Carolina Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 3.76 MB
Pages: 465
Author: Carolyn L. Karcher
ISBN: 9781469627960, 1469627965
Language: English
Year: 2016

Product desciption

A Refugee From His Race Albion W Tourge And His Fight Against White Supremacy Carolyn L Karcher by Carolyn L. Karcher 9781469627960, 1469627965 instant download after payment.

During one of the darkest periods of U.S. history, when white supremacy was entrenching itself throughout the nation, the white writer-jurist-activist Albion W. Tourgée (1838-1905) forged an extraordinary alliance with African Americans. Acclaimed by blacks as "one of the best friends of the Afro-American people this country has ever produced" and reviled by white Southerners as a race traitor, Tourgée offers an ideal lens through which to reexamine the often caricatured relations between progressive whites and African Americans. He collaborated closely with African Americans in founding an interracial civil rights organization eighteen years before the inception of the NAACP, in campaigning against lynching alongside Ida B. Wells and Cleveland Gazette editor Harry C. Smith, and in challenging the ideology of segregation as lead counsel for people of color in the 1896 Plessy v. Ferguson case. Here, Carolyn L. Karcher provides the first in-depth account of this collaboration. Drawing on Tourgée’s vast correspondence with African American intellectuals, activists, and ordinary folk, on African American newspapers and on his newspaper column, “A Bystander’s Notes,” in which he quoted and replied to letters from his correspondents, the book also captures the lively dialogue about race that Tourgée and his contemporaries carried on.

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