"This biography makes an important contribution to understanding the Civil Rights movement in the South and how the region's most important newspaper covered it. It's also fun to read about one of the South's most important twentieth-century journalists."--David E. Summer, Ball State University More than a decade before the civil rights movement, newspaperman Ralph McGill broke the social code of silence that kept white southerners from publicly debating any change in the system of racial segregation. From his editorial ...
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"This biography makes an important contribution to understanding the Civil Rights movement in the South and how the region's most important newspaper covered it. It's also fun to read about one of the South's most important twentieth-century journalists."--David E. Summer, Ball State University More than a decade before the civil rights movement, newspaperman Ralph McGill broke the social code of silence that kept white southerners from publicly debating any change in the system of racial segregation. From his editorial perch at the Atlanta Constitution, McGill dared to question the South's voting laws and its so-called "separate but equal" school system. In the North, McGill was hailed as the conscience of the South, but on his home turf he was branded a traitor and a Communist--"Red Ralph," some called him. The Ku Klux Klan picketed his newspaper offices. Reactionaries sent him hate mail, threatened him by telephone, tossed garbage on his lawn, and used his mailbox for target practice. But in his thirty-one years as an editor and publisher, McGill's columns were eagerly read, even by those who hated him. And those who admired him, including young journalists, began confronting a subject that for generations of white southerners remained a taboo. For this biography, Leonard Teel has drawn on many archival sources not previously used, including files of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, as well as public and private archives of McGill's papers and correspondence, interviews with his colleagues and family, and the vast storehouse of his opinion columns in both Nashville and Atlanta. By tracing McGill's decades-long career from his early days as a foreign correspondent in Cuba in the 1930s to his steadfast support for the Vietnam War, Teel reveals a man who, in his unique way, embodied twentieth-century liberalism in all its complexities and contraditions. Most important, Teel shows how McGill's brand of liberalism influenced thw way he grappled with the greatest issue of his time: the ending of the Jim Crow era in the South. The Author: Leonard Ray Teel is an associate professor of communications at Georgia State University, where he founded the Center for International Media Education. He has worked at CNN, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, the Evening Star in Washington, D.C., and the Miami Herald. His books include Erma: A Black Woman Remembers, 1912-1980 (with Erma Calderon, edited by Toni Morison) and Into the Newsroom: An Introduction to Journalism (with Ron Taylor), which has now been translated into Chinese, Arabic, and Spanish.
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Add this copy of Ralph Emerson McGill: Voices of the Southern Conscience to cart. $2.26, very good condition, Sold by Goodbookscafe rated 4.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Macon, GA, UNITED STATES, published 2001 by Univ Tennessee Press.
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Very Good. NDJ. Book. Thick 8vo. Signed & Dated By the Author Thick softcover with light wear to the paper-boards. Signed and dated on the title page with absolutely no further inscription, by the author. Mr. McGill was a legendary editor of the 'Atlanta Constitution' during turbulent civil rights era. This copy has a "read-a-few-times" look & feel. Stored in sealed plastic protection and mailed (bubble-wrapped) in a cardboard box. We ship daily from Roswell, Ga. Serving satisfied customers since 1999.
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