Booknotes
TRANSCRIPTS    |    ARCHIVES    |    BUY VIDEO    |    ABOUT

A Companion Web Site to C-SPAN's Author Interview Series
September 26, 1999
To Keep the Waters Troubled: The Life of Ida B. Wells
by
Linda McMurry
Author image
Options Menu

  Watch Program

  Transcript

  Classroom Guide

  Search the Video

Video Search:

When Frederick Douglass died in 1895, writes Linda O. McMurry, Ida B. Wells "was his logical heir apparent; they had collaborated closely on several projects. She was better known than W.E.B. DuBois and more ideologically compatible with Douglass than Booker T. Washington"—but it was considered too belittling to black "manhood" to have a woman leading African American politics.

Wells first rose to prominence when she wrote about her lawsuit against a railroad company that had kicked her out of a first-class seat. Throughout the 1890s, she crusaded vigorously against the rise of lynching as a tactic used by whites to intimidate the newly freed black populace. She also worked closely with the suffragist movement, but broke with white feminists who preferred to downplay or ignore ethnic dimensions to social justice. The woman who emerges from McMurry's intricately detailed biography, drawn extensively from Wells's own writings, is a fierce social advocate who easily serves as a role model for modern activists.
—from the publisher's website

Book image To Keep the Waters Troubled: The Life of Ida B. Wells
Publisher: Oxford University Press
ISBN: 0195139275

Transcript Search:

 Advanced Search

Now in Paperback!
Booknotes: On American Character, the fourth book drawn from the Booknotes series. It features 80 of America's best-known contemporary historians, biographers, and journalists. Only $16.50.



Buy DVDs
Visit the C-SPAN Store to buy Booknotes DVDs.

[ Learn More and Purchase ]



Video Note
Pop-up blockers must be set to OFF for this site in order to watch videos.

C-SPAN | American Presidents | American Writers | Book TV | Q&A
C-SPAN Civics Bus | Capitol Hearings | Students & Leaders | Tocqueville

Created by Cable. Offered as a Public Service.