Synopses & Reviews
Since its founding in 1910--the same year as another national organization devoted to the economic and social welfare aspects of race advancement, the National Urban League--the NAACP has been viewed as the vanguard national civil rights organization in American history. But these two flagship institutions were not the first important national organizations devoted to advancing the cause of racial justice. Instead, it was even earlier groups -- including the National Afro American League, the National Afro American Council, the National Association of Colored Women, and the Niagara Movement - that developed and transmitted to the NAACP and National Urban League foundational ideas about law and lawyering that these latter organizations would then pursue.
With unparalleled scholarly depth, Defining the Struggle explores these forerunner organizations whose contributions in shaping early twentieth century national civil rights organizing have largely been forgotten today. It examines the motivations of their leaders, the initiatives they undertook, and the ideas about law and racial justice activism they developed and passed on to future generations. In so doing, it sheds new light on how these early origins helped set the path for twentieth century legal civil rights activism in the United States.
Review
"Susan Carle writes a clear and convincing history of the first generation of civil rights organizers and advocates-the movement that started the Movement. We all stand on their shoulders. Let us remember their names and know their stories."--Benjamin Todd Jealous, President and CEO, NAACP
"Susan Carle's study of nineteenth-century social and legal activism is ground breaking. By shedding new light on the historical roots of the Second Reconstruction and mapping the intellectual links between modern civil rights groups and long-forgotten visionaries, Carle has made a remarkable contribution."--Tomiko Brown-Nagin, author of the Bancroft-Prize winning Courage to Dissent: Atlanta and the Long History of the Civil Rights Movement
"Susan Carle vividly recounts the long and difficult struggle for African American voting rights in the United States. Carle's inspiring stories of heroic figures who persevered in the face of seemingly impossible odds are not only amazing; they are also timely. In light of the Supreme Court's recent decisions, this is a must read for activists who seek to engage in new forms of organizing, and for scholars who seek to produce new venues for creative thinking about what it means to be a full citizen of the United States."--Lani Guinier, Bennett Boskey Professor, Harvard Law School
"This remarkable book lifts the veil that has obscured from view an entire early generation of civil rights lawyers. We learn here of organizations like the Afro-American League, the Afro-American Council, the National Association of Colored Women, the Niagara Movement, and the newly-formed NAACP and Urban League. Working in often desperate circumstances against formidable opposition, these tiny groups pioneered the civil rights movements' strategies of litigating test cases, mobilizing for legislative gains, and building social-service institutions. Their goals were not just legal equality, but economic justice and social welfare. It is astonishing to discover, thanks to Susan Carle's very moving as well as illuminating account, how much they were able to accomplish."--Robert W. Gordon, Stanford Law School
"Graduate students and scholars will find Susan Carle's Defining the Struggle informative, as it pushes the boundaries of the early legal history of racial justice advocacy and modern civil rights activism back into the late nineteenth century. Readers and researchers will appreciate the extensive endnotes and bibliography of primary sources and secondary literature." -Charles L. Lumpkins, Pennsylvania State University, North Carolina Historical Review
About the Author
Susan Carle teaches legal ethics, anti-discrimination law, labor and employment law, and torts at American University Washington College of Law. She writes primarily about the history of social change lawyering, anti-discrimination law, and topics at the intersections between civil rights, employment, and labor law. In the past she has been a community organizer, civil rights lawyer, and union-side labor lawyer.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Chapter 1. A New Generation of Post-Reconstruction Leaders
Chapter 2. The Legal and Political Vision of T. Thomas Fortune, Founder of the National Afro American League, 1880-1890
Chapter 3. The National Afro American League's Founding and Law-Related
Work, 1887-1895
Chapter 4: The Dispute between the "Radicals" and the "Accommodationists" within the Afro American Council: Reverdy Ransom and Booker T. Washington's Contrasting Visions of Racial Justice, 1895-1902
Chapter 5: The Afro American Council's Internal History, 1898-1908
Chapter 6: "Should Not a Nation Be Just to All of Her Citizens?": The Afro American Council's Legal Work, 1898-1908
Chapter 7: "Unity in Diversity": The National Association of Colored Women's Dual Social Welfare and Civil Rights Agenda, 1895-1910
Chapter 8: Asserting "Manhood" Rights: The Niagara Movement's First Year, 1905
Chapter 9: The Beginnings of Twentieth Century Protest in the Niagara Movement's Experience, 1906-1909
Chapter 10: Atlanta and New York City; Founding the National Urban League
Chapter 11: Founding the NAACP: Building the Organization, 1908-1915
Chapter 12: Building the NAACP's Legal Agenda, 1910-1915
Conclusion
Acknowledgements
Notes
Bibliography
Index