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Bis es Gerechtigkeit gibt: Das Leben von Anna Arnold Hedgeman (Hardcover- oder Gehäusebuch

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EAN
9780190248598
ISBN
0190248599
Binding
TC
Book Title
Until there Is Justice : the Life of Anna Arnold Hedgeman
Item Length
6.1in
Publisher
Oxford University Press, Incorporated
Publication Year
2016
Format
Hardcover
Language
English
Item Height
1.1in
Author
Jennifer Scanlon
Genre
Biography & Autobiography, History, Political Science
Topic
Women, United States / 20th Century, Civil Rights, General, United States / General, African American
Item Width
9.3in
Item Weight
22.4 Oz
Number of Pages
352 Pages

Über dieses Produkt

Product Information

Through a commitment to faith-based activism, civil rights, and feminism, Anna Arnold Hedgeman played a key role in some of the 20th century's most important developments, including advances in education, public health, politics, and workplace justice.

Product Identifiers

Publisher
Oxford University Press, Incorporated
ISBN-10
0190248599
ISBN-13
9780190248598
eBay Product ID (ePID)
211279596

Product Key Features

Book Title
Until there Is Justice : the Life of Anna Arnold Hedgeman
Author
Jennifer Scanlon
Format
Hardcover
Language
English
Topic
Women, United States / 20th Century, Civil Rights, General, United States / General, African American
Publication Year
2016
Genre
Biography & Autobiography, History, Political Science
Number of Pages
352 Pages

Dimensions

Item Length
6.1in
Item Height
1.1in
Item Width
9.3in
Item Weight
22.4 Oz

Additional Product Features

Lc Classification Number
E185.97.H44s29 2016
Reviews
"This powerful and poignant book lays bare the extraordinary courage and wisdom of a grand freedom fighter usually overlooked-Anna Arnold Hedgeman. Don't miss it!" --Cornel West "Anna Arnold Hedgeman has long been excluded from positive credit in important civil rights conversations, though she was definitely critical to The Dream. In Jennifer Scanlon's important book, Hedgeman is finally receiving her due."--Nikki Giovanni, writer, commentator, activist, and educator "Anna Arnold Hedgeman's life and work exemplify the often ignored interweaving of civil rights, faith-based activism, and feminism in what scholars are coming to see as a long and broad civil rights movement that encompassed many arenas of struggle. By showing how Hedgeman mediated between white religious leaders and black civil rights activists, interracialism and black power, and issues of race and gender, Scanlon reshapes our understanding of the civil rights movement's leadership and legacies. Until There Is Justice is a moving, insightful, and truly necessary book, one that illuminates inexplicably ignored aspects of our common history." --Jacquelyn Dowd Hall, Julia Cherry Spruill Professor Emerita of History, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill "Scanlon provides excellent in-depth documentation in this first biography to be written about Hedgeman." -- ibrary Journal, "Jennifer Scanlon illumines Hedgeman's feminist contributions, showing that for Hedgeman and her colleagues, issues of race and sex were never separate. A biography of Hedgeman was long overdue, and Scanlon's work confirms that Hedgeman has much to teach us today. Hedgeman's decades-long commitment to coalition building anticipates the kinds of political organizing needed today. Furthermore, Hedgeman was notable for her willingness to listen and learn from younger Black Power activists, and she encouraged her colleagues to do the same."--Christian Century "This powerful and poignant book lays bare the extraordinary courage and wisdom of a grand freedom fighter usually overlooked-Anna Arnold Hedgeman. Don't miss it!"--Cornel West "Anna Arnold Hedgeman has long been excluded from positive credit in important civil rights conversations, though she was definitely critical to The Dream. In Jennifer Scanlon's important book, Hedgeman is finally receiving her due."--Nikki Giovanni, writer, commentator, activist, and educator "Anna Arnold Hedgeman's life and work exemplify the often ignored interweaving of civil rights, faith-based activism, and feminism in what scholars are coming to see as a long and broad civil rights movement that encompassed many arenas of struggle. By showing how Hedgeman mediated between white religious leaders and black civil rights activists, interracialism and black power, and issues of race and gender, Scanlon reshapes our understanding of the civil rights movement's leadership and legacies. Until There Is Justice is a moving, insightful, and truly necessary book, one that illuminates inexplicably ignored aspects of our common history."--Jacquelyn Dowd Hall, Julia Cherry Spruill Professor Emerita of History, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill "Scanlon provides excellent in-depth documentation in this first biography to be written about Hedgeman."--Library Journal "Scanlon's splendid study not only recovers Hedgeman's important career but also compels readers to rethink biases in history that exclude women's deeds from the historical narrative."--CHOICE "Scanlon's meticulously researched and eloquently written account of Hedgeman's life is more than a biography; it serves as a narrative account of the twentieth-century black freedom struggle. Finally, with Until There Is Justice, [Anna Arnold Hedgeman's] story receives the intellectual attention it deserves."--Journal of African American History "Jennifer Scanlon's biography of the African-American activist Anna Arnold Hedgeman, who died in 1990, is long overdue. This biography presents readers with a puzzle: How did a nave girl, growing up in the only African-American family in a small white town, develop such an inclusive understanding of justice?"--New York Times "As Scanlon astutely points out in Until There Is Justice, Hedgeman's contributions to the Civil Rights Movement were obscured by the achievements of her male counterparts-A. Philip Randolph and Martin Luther King, among others. Scanlon's monograph allows us to rethink the ways in which we include women of color in the history of the Long Civil Rights Movement in a manner that is not simply contributory, but transformative and substantial."--Reviews in American History "A biography of Hedgeman is well overdue; like Ella Baker, Pauli Murray, and countless other African American women, Hedgeman has remained largely invisible despite her crucial role in the long civil rights movement. Jennifer Scanlon captures the historical significance of Hedgeman's shifting, complex career and offers important new insights into American politics across the twentieth century."--Journal of American History, "This powerful and poignant book lays bare the extraordinary courage and wisdom of a grand freedom fighter usually overlooked-Anna Arnold Hedgeman. Don't miss it!" --Cornel West "Anna Arnold Hedgeman has long been excluded from positive credit in important civil rights conversations, though she was definitely critical to The Dream. In Jennifer Scanlon's important book, Hedgeman is finally receiving her due."--Nikki Giovanni, writer, commentator, activist, and educator "Anna Arnold Hedgeman's life and work exemplify the often ignored interweaving of civil rights, faith-based activism, and feminism in what scholars are coming to see as a long and broad civil rights movement that encompassed many arenas of struggle. By showing how Hedgeman mediated between white religious leaders and black civil rights activists, interracialism and black power, and issues of race and gender, Scanlon reshapes our understanding of the civil rights movement's leadership and legacies. Until There Is Justice is a moving, insightful, and truly necessary book, one that illuminates inexplicably ignored aspects of our common history." --Jacquelyn Dowd Hall, Julia Cherry Spruill Professor Emerita of History, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, "Regardless, readers who care about American religion and democracy have much to glean "--Christian Century "This powerful and poignant book lays bare the extraordinary courage and wisdom of a grand freedom fighter usually overlooked-Anna Arnold Hedgeman. Don't miss it!" --Cornel West "Anna Arnold Hedgeman has long been excluded from positive credit in important civil rights conversations, though she was definitely critical to The Dream. In Jennifer Scanlon's important book, Hedgeman is finally receiving her due."--Nikki Giovanni, writer, commentator, activist, and educator "Anna Arnold Hedgeman's life and work exemplify the often ignored interweaving of civil rights, faith-based activism, and feminism in what scholars are coming to see as a long and broad civil rights movement that encompassed many arenas of struggle. By showing how Hedgeman mediated between white religious leaders and black civil rights activists, interracialism and black power, and issues of race and gender, Scanlon reshapes our understanding of the civil rights movement's leadership and legacies. Until There Is Justice is a moving, insightful, and truly necessary book, one that illuminates inexplicably ignored aspects of our common history." --Jacquelyn Dowd Hall, Julia Cherry Spruill Professor Emerita of History, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill "Scanlon provides excellent in-depth documentation in this first biography to be written about Hedgeman." --Library Journal "Scanlon's splendid study not only recovers Hedgeman's important career but also compels readers to rethink biases in history that exclude women's deeds from the historical narrative." -- Choice, "Jennifer Scanlon illumines Hedgeman's feminist contributions, showing that for Hedgeman and her colleagues, issues of race and sex were never separate. A biography of Hedgeman was long overdue, and Scanlon's work confirms that Hedgeman has much to teach us today. Hedgeman's decades-long commitment to coalition building anticipates the kinds of political organizing needed today. Furthermore, Hedgeman was notable for her willingness to listen and learn from younger Black Power activists, and she encouraged her colleagues to do the same."--Christian Century "This powerful and poignant book lays bare the extraordinary courage and wisdom of a grand freedom fighter usually overlooked-Anna Arnold Hedgeman. Don't miss it!"--Cornel West "Anna Arnold Hedgeman has long been excluded from positive credit in important civil rights conversations, though she was definitely critical to The Dream. In Jennifer Scanlon's important book, Hedgeman is finally receiving her due."--Nikki Giovanni, writer, commentator, activist, and educator "Anna Arnold Hedgeman's life and work exemplify the often ignored interweaving of civil rights, faith-based activism, and feminism in what scholars are coming to see as a long and broad civil rights movement that encompassed many arenas of struggle. By showing how Hedgeman mediated between white religious leaders and black civil rights activists, interracialism and black power, and issues of race and gender, Scanlon reshapes our understanding of the civil rights movement's leadership and legacies. Until There Is Justice is a moving, insightful, and truly necessary book, one that illuminates inexplicably ignored aspects of our common history."--Jacquelyn Dowd Hall, Julia Cherry Spruill Professor Emerita of History, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill "Scanlon provides excellent in-depth documentation in this first biography to be written about Hedgeman."--Library Journal "Scanlon's splendid study not only recovers Hedgeman's important career but also compels readers to rethink biases in history that exclude women's deeds from the historical narrative."--CHOICE "Scanlon's meticulously researched and eloquently written account of Hedgeman's life is more than a biography; it serves as a narrative account of the twentieth-century black freedom struggle. Finally, with Until There Is Justice, [Anna Arnold Hedgeman's] story receives the intellectual attention it deserves."--Journal of African American History "Jennifer Scanlon's biography of the African-American activist Anna Arnold Hedgeman, who died in 1990, is long overdue. This biography presents readers with a puzzle: How did a naïve girl, growing up in the only African-American family in a small white town, develop such an inclusive understanding of justice?"--New York Times "As Scanlon astutely points out in Until There Is Justice, Hedgeman's contributions to the Civil Rights Movement were obscured by the achievements of her male counterparts-A. Philip Randolph and Martin Luther King, among others. Scanlon's monograph allows us to rethink the ways in which we include women of color in the history of the Long Civil Rights Movement in a manner that is not simply contributory, but transformative and substantial."--Reviews in American History "A biography of Hedgeman is well overdue; like Ella Baker, Pauli Murray, and countless other African American women, Hedgeman has remained largely invisible despite her crucial role in the long civil rights movement. Jennifer Scanlon captures the historical significance of Hedgeman's shifting, complex career and offers important new insights into American politics across the twentieth century."--Journal of American History, "Jennifer Scanlon illumines Hedgeman's feminist contributions, showing that for Hedgeman and her colleagues, issues of race and sex were never separate. A biography of Hedgeman was long overdue, and Scanlon's work confirms that Hedgeman has much to teach us today. Hedgeman's decades-long commitment to coalition building anticipates the kinds of political organizing needed today. Furthermore, Hedgeman was notable for her willingness to listen and learn fromyounger Black Power activists, and she encouraged her colleagues to do the same."--Christian Century"This powerful and poignant book lays bare the extraordinary courage and wisdom of a grand freedom fighter usually overlooked-Anna Arnold Hedgeman. Don't miss it!"--Cornel West"Anna Arnold Hedgeman has long been excluded from positive credit in important civil rights conversations, though she was definitely critical to The Dream. In Jennifer Scanlon's important book, Hedgeman is finally receiving her due."--Nikki Giovanni, writer, commentator, activist, and educator"Anna Arnold Hedgeman's life and work exemplify the often ignored interweaving of civil rights, faith-based activism, and feminism in what scholars are coming to see as a long and broad civil rights movement that encompassed many arenas of struggle. By showing how Hedgeman mediated between white religious leaders and black civil rights activists, interracialism and black power, and issues of race and gender, Scanlon reshapes our understanding of the civilrights movement's leadership and legacies. Until There Is Justice is a moving, insightful, and truly necessary book, one that illuminates inexplicably ignored aspects of our common history."--Jacquelyn DowdHall, Julia Cherry Spruill Professor Emerita of History, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill"Scanlon provides excellent in-depth documentation in this first biography to be written about Hedgeman."--Library Journal"Scanlon's splendid study not only recovers Hedgeman's important career but also compels readers to rethink biases in history that exclude women's deeds from the historical narrative."--CHOICE"Scanlon's meticulously researched and eloquently written account of Hedgeman's life is more than a biography; it serves as a narrative account of the twentieth-century black freedom struggle. Finally, with Until There Is Justice, [Anna Arnold Hedgeman's] story receives the intellectual attention it deserves."--Journal of African American History"Jennifer Scanlon's biography of the African-American activist Anna Arnold Hedgeman, who died in 1990, is long overdue. This biography presents readers with a puzzle: How did a naïve girl, growing up in the only African-American family in a small white town, develop such an inclusive understanding of justice?"--New York Times"As Scanlon astutely points out in Until There Is Justice, Hedgeman's contributions to the Civil Rights Movement were obscured by the achievements of her male counterparts-A. Philip Randolph and Martin Luther King, among others. Scanlon's monograph allows us to rethink the ways in which we include women of color in the history of the Long Civil Rights Movement in a manner that is not simply contributory, but transformative and substantial."--Reviews inAmerican History"A biography of Hedgeman is well overdue; like Ella Baker, Pauli Murray, and countless other African American women, Hedgeman has remained largely invisible despite her crucial role in the long civil rights movement. Jennifer Scanlon captures the historical significance of Hedgeman's shifting, complex career and offers important new insights into American politics across the twentieth century."--Journal of American History, "Regardless, readers who care about American religion and democracy have much to glean..."--Christian Century "This powerful and poignant book lays bare the extraordinary courage and wisdom of a grand freedom fighter usually overlooked-Anna Arnold Hedgeman. Don't miss it!"--Cornel West "Anna Arnold Hedgeman has long been excluded from positive credit in important civil rights conversations, though she was definitely critical to The Dream. In Jennifer Scanlon's important book, Hedgeman is finally receiving her due."--Nikki Giovanni, writer, commentator, activist, and educator "Anna Arnold Hedgeman's life and work exemplify the often ignored interweaving of civil rights, faith-based activism, and feminism in what scholars are coming to see as a long and broad civil rights movement that encompassed many arenas of struggle. By showing how Hedgeman mediated between white religious leaders and black civil rights activists, interracialism and black power, and issues of race and gender, Scanlon reshapes our understanding of the civil rights movement's leadership and legacies. Until There Is Justice is a moving, insightful, and truly necessary book, one that illuminates inexplicably ignored aspects of our common history."--Jacquelyn Dowd Hall, Julia Cherry Spruill Professor Emerita of History, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill "Scanlon provides excellent in-depth documentation in this first biography to be written about Hedgeman."--Library Journal "Scanlon's splendid study not only recovers Hedgeman's important career but also compels readers to rethink biases in history that exclude women's deeds from the historical narrative."--CHOICE, "Jennifer Scanlon illumines Hedgeman's feminist contributions, showing that for Hedgeman and her colleagues, issues of race and sex were never separate. A biography of Hedgeman was long overdue, and Scanlon's work confirms that Hedgeman has much to teach us today. Hedgeman's decades-long commitment to coalition building anticipates the kinds of political organizing needed today. Furthermore, Hedgeman was notable for her willingness to listen and learn from younger Black Power activists, and she encouraged her colleagues to do the same."--Christian Century"This powerful and poignant book lays bare the extraordinary courage and wisdom of a grand freedom fighter usually overlooked-Anna Arnold Hedgeman. Don't miss it!"--Cornel West"Anna Arnold Hedgeman has long been excluded from positive credit in important civil rights conversations, though she was definitely critical to The Dream. In Jennifer Scanlon's important book, Hedgeman is finally receiving her due."--Nikki Giovanni, writer, commentator, activist, and educator"Anna Arnold Hedgeman's life and work exemplify the often ignored interweaving of civil rights, faith-based activism, and feminism in what scholars are coming to see as a long and broad civil rights movement that encompassed many arenas of struggle. By showing how Hedgeman mediated between white religious leaders and black civil rights activists, interracialism and black power, and issues of race and gender, Scanlon reshapes our understanding of the civil rights movement's leadership and legacies. Until There Is Justice is a moving, insightful, and truly necessary book, one that illuminates inexplicably ignored aspects of our common history."--Jacquelyn Dowd Hall, Julia Cherry Spruill Professor Emerita of History, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill"Scanlon provides excellent in-depth documentation in this first biography to be written about Hedgeman."--Library Journal"Scanlon's splendid study not only recovers Hedgeman's important career but also compels readers to rethink biases in history that exclude women's deeds from the historical narrative."--CHOICE"Scanlon's meticulously researched and eloquently written account of Hedgeman's life is more than a biography; it serves as a narrative account of the twentieth-century black freedom struggle. Finally, with Until There Is Justice, [Anna Arnold Hedgeman's] story receives the intellectual attention it deserves."--Journal of African American History"Jennifer Scanlon's biography of the African-American activist Anna Arnold Hedgeman, who died in 1990, is long overdue. This biography presents readers with a puzzle: How did a naïve girl, growing up in the only African-American family in a small white town, develop such an inclusive understanding of justice?"--New York Times"As Scanlon astutely points out in Until There Is Justice, Hedgeman's contributions to the Civil Rights Movement were obscured by the achievements of her male counterparts-A. Philip Randolph and Martin Luther King, among others. Scanlon's monograph allows us to rethink the ways in which we include women of color in the history of the Long Civil Rights Movement in a manner that is not simply contributory, but transformative and substantial."--Reviews in American History"A biography of Hedgeman is well overdue; like Ella Baker, Pauli Murray, and countless other African American women, Hedgeman has remained largely invisible despite her crucial role in the long civil rights movement. Jennifer Scanlon captures the historical significance of Hedgeman's shifting, complex career and offers important new insights into American politics across the twentieth century."--Journal of American History, "Anna Arnold Hedgeman's life and work exemplify the often ignored interweaving of civil rights, faith-based activism, and feminism in what scholars are coming to see as a long and broad civil rights movement that encompassed many arenas of struggle. By showing how Hedgeman mediated between white religious leaders and black civil rights activists, interracialism and black power, and issues of race and gender, Scanlon reshapes our understanding of the civil rights movement's leadership and legacies. Until There Is Justice is a moving, insightful, and truly necessary book, one that illuminates inexplicably ignored aspects of our common history." --Jacquelyn Dowd Hall, Julia Cherry Spruill Professor Emerita of History, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, "This powerful and poignant book lays bare the extraordinary courage and wisdom of a grand freedom fighter usually overlooked-Anna Arnold Hedgeman. Don't miss it!" --Cornel West "Anna Arnold Hedgeman has long been excluded from positive credit in important civil rights conversations, though she was definitely critical to The Dream. In Jennifer Scanlon's important book, Hedgeman is finally receiving her due."--Nikki Giovanni, writer, commentator, activist, and educator "Anna Arnold Hedgeman's life and work exemplify the often ignored interweaving of civil rights, faith-based activism, and feminism in what scholars are coming to see as a long and broad civil rights movement that encompassed many arenas of struggle. By showing how Hedgeman mediated between white religious leaders and black civil rights activists, interracialism and black power, and issues of race and gender, Scanlon reshapes our understanding of the civil rights movement's leadership and legacies. Until There Is Justice is a moving, insightful, and truly necessary book, one that illuminates inexplicably ignored aspects of our common history." --Jacquelyn Dowd Hall, Julia Cherry Spruill Professor Emerita of History, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill "Scanlon provides excellent in-depth documentation in this first biography to be written about Hedgeman." --Library Journal "Scanlon's splendid study not only recovers Hedgeman's important career but also compels readers to rethink biases in history that exclude women's deeds from the historical narrative." -- Choice
Table of Content
Prologue: A Purposeful Life 1. A Midwestern Childhood 2. Education: The First Measure of Independence 3. Teaching in the Segregated South 4. Heading North to Spread the Word: The YWCA Years 5. Harlem and Brooklyn in the Great Depression 6. World War II: If Ever There Were a Time for Racial Justice 7. Fighting for Fair Employment, Fighting for Truman 8. "New World Citizen": Developing a National Portfolio, an International Consciousness, and an FBI File 9. Running for Political Office, Securing a Spot in City Hall 10. " A Burr in the Saddle": Anna Arnold Hedgeman, White Protestants, and the March on Washington 11. The 'Double Handicap' of Sex and Race: The March on Washington 12. Religious Activism for Racial Justice: The Commission on Religion and Race 13. Black Power, White Power, Woman Power, Christian Power 14. Refusing Retirement: The Hedgeman Consultant Service Epilogue: Fighting for Heaven, Right Here on Earth: The Legacies, Prologue: A Purposeful Life1. A Midwestern Childhood2. Education: The First Measure of Independence3. Teaching in the Segregated South4. Heading North to Spread the Word: The YWCA Years5. Harlem and Brooklyn in the Great Depression6. World War II: If Ever There Were a Time for Racial Justice7. Fighting for Fair Employment, Fighting for Truman8. "New World Citizen": Developing a National Portfolio, an International Consciousness, and an FBI File9. Running for Political Office, Securing a Spot in City Hall10. " A Burr in the Saddle": Anna Arnold Hedgeman, White Protestants, and the March on Washington11. The 'Double Handicap' of Sex and Race: The March on Washington12. Religious Activism for Racial Justice: The Commission on Religion and Race13. Black Power, White Power, Woman Power, Christian Power14. Refusing Retirement: The Hedgeman Consultant ServiceEpilogue: Fighting for Heaven, Right Here on Earth: The Legacies
Copyright Date
2016
Lccn
2015-044851
Dewey Decimal
323.092 B
Intended Audience
Trade
Dewey Edition
23
Illustrated
Yes

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