Reviews for Righteous troublemakers : untold stories of the social justice movement in America

Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

The prominent Baptist preacher and activist spotlights the work of the “unsung heroes” of modern social justice movements. For Sharpton, the 2020 George Floyd murder protests recalled the civil rights marches of the 1960s. While the former event made clear that the “hardships and victories” of all marginalized groups had merged into a single fight, both events were alike in how the bravery of everyday people had been “overlooked or cast aside.” In this apt follow-up to last year’s Rise Up: Confronting a Country at the Crossroads, the author begins with story of Darnella Frazier, who recorded Floyd’s murder on her cellphone to honor truth and all Black men who live in fear of White supremacy. In his discussion of other police brutality victims, Sharpton recalls another police chokehold victim, Eric Garner, as well as his mother, Gwen Carr. In the years after her son’s death, Carr joined forces with other similarly bereaved mothers to form Mothers of the Movement, an organization dedicated to “raising social awareness of police violence.” Yet as Sharpton emphasizes throughout, the larger movement of which all these individuals are part was built on the efforts of early civil rights activists like James Meredith, the first Black man to graduate from the rabidly segregationist University of Mississippi, and Claudette Colvin, the poor Black girl whose 1955 arrest for refusing to sit at the back of an Alabama bus inspired the more “mediagenic” Rosa Parks to action. Sharpton also pays extended homage to Pauli Murray, a queer mid-20th-century lawyer and feminist. Co-founder of the National Organization for Women with Betty Friedan and others, her legal scholarship informed the work of such judicial luminaries as Thurgood Marshall and Ruth Bader Ginsburg. Seeking to rectify omissions of history, Sharpton delivers a fierce and celebratory book that offers insight into ways everyone can transform the pain of injustice into the “righteous troublemak[ing]” that uplifts all. Inspired and inspiring reading for troubled times. Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.


Publishers Weekly
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In this inspiring history, civil rights activist Sharpton (Rise Up) spotlights “lesser-known rabble rousers” who have fought for racial justice in the U.S. Noting that Martin Luther King Jr.’s March on Washington in 1963 “sidelined” women and LGBTQ people, Sharpton profiles activists including Ernestine Eckstein, whose experiences working with the NAACP influenced her activism for gay rights, and Pauli Murray, whose legal theories helped shape Thurgood Marshall’s winning arguments in Brown v. Board of Education and Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s in Reed v. Reed, the first Supreme Court ruling to hold that the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment protects women’s rights. Elsewhere, Sharpton unearths the stories of Claudette Colvin, whose refusal to move to the back of a city bus in Montgomery, Ala., inspired Rosa Parks to do the same thing nine months later; Ramsey Orta, who filmed the police killing of Eric Garner in 2014; and George Floyd’s brother Philonise Floyd, who “found a sense of purpose and meaning in life” through speaking out against police brutality. Throughout, Sharpton shares inspiring anecdotes from the front lines of protest marches and reflects on the courage of family members who have been thrust into activism by the tragic death of a loved one. This is a worthy testament to those whose commitment to the cause has flown under the radar. (Jan.)


Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

The prominent Baptist preacher and activist spotlights the work of the unsung heroes of modern social justice movements.For Sharpton, the 2020 George Floyd murder protests recalled the civil rights marches of the 1960s. While the former event made clear that the hardships and victories of all marginalized groups had merged into a single fight, both events were alike in how the bravery of everyday people had been overlooked or cast aside. In this apt follow-up to last years Rise Up: Confronting a Country at the Crossroads, the author begins with story of Darnella Frazier, who recorded Floyds murder on her cellphone to honor truth and all Black men who live in fear of White supremacy. In his discussion of other police brutality victims, Sharpton recalls another police chokehold victim, Eric Garner, as well as his mother, Gwen Carr. In the years after her sons death, Carr joined forces with other similarly bereaved mothers to form Mothers of the Movement, an organization dedicated to raising social awareness of police violence. Yet as Sharpton emphasizes throughout, the larger movement of which all these individuals are part was built on the efforts of early civil rights activists like James Meredith, the first Black man to graduate from the rabidly segregationist University of Mississippi, and Claudette Colvin, the poor Black girl whose 1955 arrest for refusing to sit at the back of an Alabama bus inspired the more mediagenic Rosa Parks to action. Sharpton also pays extended homage to Pauli Murray, a queer mid-20th-century lawyer and feminist. Co-founder of the National Organization for Women with Betty Friedan and others, her legal scholarship informed the work of such judicial luminaries as Thurgood Marshall and Ruth Bader Ginsburg. Seeking to rectify omissions of history, Sharpton delivers a fierce and celebratory book that offers insight into ways everyone can transform the pain of injustice into the righteous troublemak[ing] that uplifts all.Inspired and inspiring reading for troubled times. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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