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Mirror to America: The Autobiography of John
Hope Franklin
John Hope Franklin
ISBN: 0374299447
Format: Hardcover, 401pp
Pub. Date: November 2005
Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux
List Price: $25.00
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John Hope Franklin lived through America's most defining twentieth-century
transformation, the dismantling of legally-protected racial segregation. A
renowned scholar, he has explored that transformation in its myriad aspects,
notably in his 3.5 million-copy bestseller, From Slavery to Freedom. And he
was, and remains, an active participant. Born in 1915, he, like every other
African American, could not but participate: he was evicted from whites-only
train cars, confined to segregated schools, threatened-once with lynching-and
consistently met with racism's denigration of his humanity. And yet he managed
to receive a Ph.D. from Harvard, become the first black historian to assume a
full-professorship at a white institution, Brooklyn College, be appointed chair
of the University of Chicago's history department and, later, John B. Duke
Professor at Duke University. He has reshaped the way African American history
is understood and taught and become one of the world's most celebrated
historians, garnering over 130 honorary degrees. But Franklin's participation
was much more fundamental than that.
From his effort in 1934 to hand President Franklin Roosevelt a petition calling
for action in response to the Cordie Cheek lynching, to his 1997 appointment by
President Clinton to head the President's Initiative on Race, and continuing to
the present, Franklin has influenced with determination and dignity the
nation's racial conscience. Whether aiding Thurgood Marshall's preparation for
arguing Brown v. Board in 1954, marching to Montgomery, Alabama, in 1965, or
testifying against Robert Bork's nomination to the Supreme Court in 1987,
Franklin has pushed the nationalconversation on race towards humanity and
equality, a life-long effort that earned him the Presidential Medal of Freedom,
the nation's highest civilian honor, in 1995. Intimate, at times revelatory,
Mirror to America chronicles Franklin's life and this nation's racial
transformation in the 20th century, and is a powerful reminder of the extent to
which the problem of America remains the problem of color.
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