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Medgar
Evers
Mississippi Martyr
Michael Vinson Williams
"An
important and readable study of this seminal leader and the
history of the civil rights movement."
—Publishers Weekly
"Williams’s
work tops what have been too few head-on examinations of the
substance and significance of this martyr’s sacrifice,
a man who demonstrated the truth he liked to repeat: “You
can kill a man, but you can’t kill an idea.” General
readers and scholars will benefit from reading this work..."
—Library
Journal, Nov 2011
"Masterful…
Williams's great achievement here is in recognizing that Evers
was more than just a symbol of resistance. With Mississippi
Martyr, he has written the seminal work on the life of
Medgar Wiley Evers."
—Brent Riffel in Arkansas Review, 2012
"Mississippi
State professor pens first biography of civil rights icon
Medgar Evers" - read
the article at the Columbia Dispatch
“In this
well-grounded inquiry into Mississippi’s heart of darkness,
Williams offers an essential reading of the short life and
tragic times of Medgar Evers, the modest, heroic freedom fighter
who, perhaps more than any other, helped transform the nation’s
most fiercely racist state.”
—Neil McMillen, Bancroft Prize-winning author of Dark
Journey: Black Mississippians in the Age of Jim Crow
"Americans
remember Medgar Evers—if they remember him at all—as
the black leader gunned down the night President Kennedy made
his famous civil rights speech. But Evers was much more than
that, as Michael Williams makes clear in this marvelous biography.
Long before the TV cameras and newsmen descended on the Magnolia
State, Evers was risking his life on the back roads of Mississippi,
organizing local people to take charge of their destiny. A
hero and a martyr, Evers was also a complicated man torn between
his activist impulses and the conservative mandates of his
NAACP bosses in New York. Williams captures Medgar Evers in
all his complexity in this well written, solidly researched,
important book."
—John Dittmer, Bancroft Prize-winning author of Local
People: The Struggle for Civil Rights in Mississippi
“Michael
Williams’s book provides the first scholarly full-length
treatment
of this iconic Mississippi civil rights leader, and it is
a fitting tribute,
providing the depth, detail, and texture hitherto missing
from Evers’s life
story.”
—John A. Kirk,
chair and Donaghey Professor of History, University of Arkansas
at Little Rock
Civil
rights activist Medgar Wiley Evers was well aware of the dangers
he would face when he challenged the status quo in Mississippi
in the 1950s and ‘60s, a place and time known for the
brutal murders of Emmett Till, Reverend George Lee, Lamar
Smith, and others. Nonetheless, Evers consistently investigated
the rapes, murders, beatings, and lynchings of black Mississippians
and reported the horrid incidents to a national audience,
all the while organizing economic boycotts, sit-ins, and street
protests in Jackson as the NAACP’s first full-time Mississippi
field secretary. He organized and participated in voting drives
and nonviolent direct-action protests, joined lawsuits to
overturn state-supported school segregation, and devoted himself
to a career path that cost him his life.
This biography
of an important civil rights leader draws on personal interviews
from Myrlie Evers-Williams (Evers’s widow), his two
remaining siblings, friends, grade-school-to-college schoolmates,
and fellow activists to elucidate Evers as an individual,
leader, husband, brother, and father. Extensive archival work
in the Evers Papers, the NAACP Papers, oral history collections,
FBI files, Citizen Council collections, and the Mississippi
State Sovereignty Commission Papers, to list a few, provides
a detailed account of Evers’s NAACP work and a clearer
understanding of the racist environment that ultimately led
to his murder.
Michael
Vinson Williams is assistant professor of
history and African
American studies at Mississippi State University.
November
6 x 9, 453 pages
46 images, index
$34.95 cloth
ISBN 978-1-55728-973-5
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