Reviews for Let the people see : the story of Emmett Till

Publishers Weekly
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As historian Gorn (Mother Jones: The Most Dangerous Woman in America) shows in this insightful study, the murder of 14-year-old Emmett Till in 1955 Mississippi has served as an "American Rashomon," reinterpreted again and again over the years by its tellers and listeners. In a series of short, tightly focused chapters, Gorn leads the reader through Till's short life, Northern and Southern responses to his killing, his mother's refusal to let her son's life and death be forgotten, and, in forensic detail, the trial and acquittal of his murderers. A particularly intriguing section deals with Emmett's father, Louis Till, who had been executed by the U.S. Army after being convicted of raping and murdering several women in Italy during WWII; although Louis had had very little contact with Emmett, Southern newspapers attempted to justify his killers' actions by claiming that he had somehow inherited Louis's desire to defile white women. Gorn presents a masterful excavation of the ways in which Till's memory was interpreted as both a rallying call for racial equality and a piece of "Jim Crow wisdom" that black parents passed on to their children to warn them of the dangers of a racist world. This perceptive take on a signal event from the civil rights movement deserves a wide readership. (Nov.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

The murder of young Emmett Till in 1955 stands today as a byword for racist injustice. How it became so is the subject of this well-conceived work of social history.Gorn (Chair, American Urban History/Loyola Univ. Chicago; Dillinger's Wild Ride: The Year That Made America's Public Enemy Number One, 2009, etc.) begins his account with the end of Till's lifethat is, with the gruesome murder in which the young black man was mutilated and tossed into a Mississippi river, his body weighted down with a part from a cotton gin. "We could tell by looking at it that it was a colored person," said a white farmer who recovered the body. Infamously, Till, visiting from Chicago, was killed for supposedly flirting with a white woman. It was one of countless lynchings, made public in good measure because Till's mother demanded an open casket, saying, "let the people see what they did to my boy." The woman's husband was implicated in a tale of justice and injustice that Gorn examines from many angles: the conduct of the investigation; the reverberations of the Till case in the civil rights movement that was then gathering force, especially as reported by the black press; and, today, how the memory of the Till case is presented in history books, museum exhibits, and the like. As the author documents, the proceedings made a textbook example of Southern apartheid, with a sheriff on the stand lying (he maintained that the body was black because it was sunburned, for instance) and with white supremacists defiantly proclaiming that Till was to be just the first of countless victims. Combing archives and libraries, Gorn assembles a solid case study in how an isolated legal case spread nationally and internationallyand in how, today, the once-exultant supremacist claim that no white would ever go to jail for killing a black person in Mississippi has since been disproven, though racism is far from disappearing.A timely contribution to the literature of civil rights. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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