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Ida: A Sword Among Lions (2008)

by Paula J. Giddings

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2683100,564 (4.03)3
Traces the life and legacy of the nineteenth-century activist and pioneer, documenting her birth into slavery, her career as a journalist and a pioneer for civil rights and suffrage, and her determination to counter lynching.
  1. 00
    When and Where I Enter: The Impact of Black Women on Race and Sex in America by Paula J. Giddings (lilysea)
    lilysea: If this enormous (but fabulous!) biography of Ida B. Wells is a bit daunting, read Giddings book When and Where I Enter. It contains a good section on Wells and a terrific look at the history of the United States from the perspective of African American women, in general.… (more)
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A detailed biography of Ida Wells. Ida was a black journalist who crusaded against lynching. When she was forced to flee the south, she moved to New York and finally Chicago. Despite all she encountered she remained not only a spokesman against lynching, but a vocal support of suffrage, which considering the reception she got from white women was amazing. Of course, being female, she got little credit for what she did. ( )
  brangwinn | Dec 9, 2019 |
Ida B. Wells, at least until the publication of this book, was something of a footnote in history, her role in anti-lynching campaigns played down by those who came after her.

Gidding's book restores Wells reputation, in great detail. Actually the book was hard for me to get through. It is long and heavy, not good with my minor carpal tunnel. But I decided to finish the book and am glad that I did.

Wells was born a slave in 1862. Her parents were skilled though, and made an easier transition to freedom than many others. Unfortunately they died young, and Wells and her siblings were forced to survive on their own. Wells lived in Memphis and was a teacher. Black civil rights, gained afer the Civil War, began to be eroded pretty quickly. Wells first came to public attention with an anti-lynching article in 1892, against the lynching of three men, one of whom was a friend of hers. Her anti-lynching campaign helped propel her into journalism, but she was forced into exile from Memphis in fear of her life. She traveled a lot, eventually winding up in Chicago, where she married a lawyer named Ferdinand Barnett and had four children with him. She never stopped working for civil rights for African-Americans and women, and for improving conditions for blacks.

In her anti-lynching campaigns, she investigated incidents in detail, and published the results in pamphlets, while also writing articles refuting that the cause of most lynchings was black male rape of white women.

Wells could be a contentious personality, and it cost her over her life. But what also cost her was just the unwillingness of many to hear the cold hard facts she wanted revealed. She was farther to the left politically than most, insisting on civil rights when it was far more popular to follow Booker T. Washington in saying that black vocational education was more important than rights, that it would improve the economic conditions and raise the status of the race. Wells knew that, for one thing, it wasn't a lot of use to educate blacks for jobs that they wouldn't be hired for because of their skin color.

Giddings gets into some sickening detail in eiscussing lynchings, but these are the facts. The events were brutal... not just death, but torture before death. Reading these horrors don't make one proud of being white. Even progressive whites were often unable to understand the degree of their racial prejudice. Ida made them uncomfortable because she would tell that they were wrong and why.

So all in all, this is a story that shows the worst of humanity, prejudice so strong it destroyed lives in so many ways, but also of those who had the courage to speak up, and to never give up, despite every possible discouragement. It reinforces what I've thought for a long while, that society advances by evolutionary change rather than revolutionary. Revolutions tend to provoke reaction that sends things back to where they were or worse. Yet society needs the revolutionary voices to raise consciousness and introduce new progressive ideas. Ida B. Wells was one of those voices.

Ida: A Sword Among Lions is a book that in the end rewards the effort of reading it. ( )
  reannon | May 30, 2009 |
I was a big Ida B. Wells fan before she signed with a major label. But I am so happy to see that label is Paula Giddings whose history writing reads like a novel. In When and Where I Enter Giddings introduced me to U.S. history through the experience of African American women. In her tome on the life of Ida B. Wells, she excavates every aspect of life and society surrounding Wells to give not just a biographical portrait of one of the most important Americans of the 19th and early 20th centuries, but a complete picture of life in her times. It's a picture we should all acquaint ourselves with, as it begins to look, at times, like something of a mirror of our own, in spite of our claims to racial progress.

Thank you so much, Paula GIddings for giving us a biography that is truly worthy of its remarkable subject!
1 vote lilysea | Jul 10, 2008 |
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Epigraph
My soul is among lions;
and I lie even among them
that are set on fire,
even the sons of men,
whose teeth are spears and arrows,
and their tongue a sharp sword.

---Psalm 57:4
Dedication
To my mother,
Virginia Iola Giddings,
always...

and to the late Alfreda M. Duster,
a daughter who kept the memory
of Ida B. Wells alive
First words
Ida B. Wells was in New York City when she heard the terrible news.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Full title (2008): Ida : a sword among lions : Ida B. Wells and the campaign against lynching / Paula J. Giddings
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Traces the life and legacy of the nineteenth-century activist and pioneer, documenting her birth into slavery, her career as a journalist and a pioneer for civil rights and suffrage, and her determination to counter lynching.

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