Pioneering African American journalist Ida B. Wells-Barnett
(1862-1931) is widely remembered for her courageous antilynching
crusade in the 1890s; the full range of her struggles against
injustice is not as well known. With this book, Patricia Schechter
restores Wells-Barnett to her central, if embattled, place in the
early reform movements for civil rights, women's suffrage, and
Progressivism in the United States and abroad. Schechter's
comprehensive treatment makes vivid the scope of Wells-Barnett's
contributions and examines why the political philosophy and
leadership of this extraordinary activist eventually became
marginalized.
Though forced into the shadow of black male leaders such as W. E.
B. Du Bois and Booker T. Washington and misunderstood and then
ignored by white women reformers such as Frances E. Willard and
Jane Addams, Wells-Barnett nevertheless successfully enacted a
religiously inspired, female-centered, and intensely political
vision of social betterment and empowerment for African American
communities throughout her adult years. By analyzing her ideas and
activism in fresh sharpness and detail, Schechter exposes the
promise and limits of social change by and for black women during
an especially violent yet hopeful era in U.S. history.