| Linda O. McMurry - 2000 - 417 ˹éÒ
...WellsBarnett opened with "three salient facts": First: Lynching is color line murder. Second: Crime against women is the excuse, not the cause. Third:...is a national crime and requires a national remedy. She then gave proof of those statements and talked of the remedy. "Agitation, though helpful, will... | |
| Robert G. Torricelli, Andrew Caroll - 1999 - 488 ˹éÒ
...since. Ida B. Wells-Barnett Calls Attention to the Epidemic ofLynchings and "Mob Murder" in America. The lynching record for a quarter of a century merits...is a national crime and requires a national remedy. Proof that lynching follows the color line is to be found in the statistics which have been kept for... | |
| Daniela Gioseffi - 2003 - 420 ˹éÒ
...others, continued well into and throughout the twentieth century in the United State of America. • The lynching record for a quarter of a century merits...is a national crime and requires a national remedy. Proof that lynching follows the color line is to be found in the statistics which have been kept for... | |
| Manning Marable - 2003 - 708 ˹éÒ
...popular political essays and journalistic commentaries inspired several generations of black activists. The lynching record for a quarter of a century merits...It presents three salient facts: First: Lynching is color-line murder. Second: Crimes against women is the excuse, not the cause. Third: It is a national... | |
| Steven L. Piott - 2006 - 244 ˹éÒ
...Crime." in which she opened with three "facts": First: Lynching is color line murder. Second: Crime against women is the excuse, not the cause. Third:...a national crime and requires a national remedy." To Wells, agitation to stop lynching would have to be backed up with an appeal to law. which would... | |
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