有声读物: Mob Rule In New Orleans
- Download Introduction audio
- Download Shot an Officer (Part 1) audio
- Download Shot an Officer (Part 2) audio
- Download Shot an Officer (Part 3) audio
- Download Death of Charles audio
- Download Mob Brutality audio
- Download Insolent Blacks audio
- Download Shocking Brutality audio
- Download Murder on the Levee audio
- Download A Victim in the Market audio
- Download A Gray-Haired Victim audio
- Download Fun in Gretna audio
- Download Brutality in New Orleans audio
- Download Was Charles a Desperado? audio
- Download Died in Self-Defense audio
- Download Burning Human Beings Alive audio
- Download Lynching Record audio
有声读物类型
作者
描述
Born into slavery in Mississippi in 1862, Ida B. Wells-Barnett was an African-American journalist, newspaper editor, suffragist, sociologist, feminist, leader in the Civil Rights Movement, and one of the founders of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) in 1909. Gathering her information from two New Orleans newspapers, Mrs. Wells-Barnett recounts in graphic detail the events of one particularly violent week in early 20th century New Orleans during which a mob "roamed the streets day and night, searching for colored men and women, whom they beat, shot and killed at will." A worse massacre was avoided, as stated by the author, because of "the determined stand for law and order taken by these great [newspapers] and the courageous action taken by the best citizens of New Orleans, who rallied to the support of the civic authorities." This account serves as chilling documentation of the mindless savagery of an anger- and hate-driven mob. - Summary by Holly Jenson
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