And justice for all : the United States Commission on Civil Rights and the continuing struggle for freedom in America /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Berry, Mary Frances.
Edition:1st ed.
Imprint:New York : Alfred A. Knopf, 2009.
Description:xiv, 425 p. : ill. ; 25 cm.
Language:English
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/7545411
Hidden Bibliographic Details
ISBN:0307263207
9780307263209
Notes:Includes bibliographical references (p. [341]-397) and index.
Review by Choice Review

This book by distinguished social historian and race relations scholar Berry (Univ. of Pennsylvania) will quickly become an important part of the historiography of the civil rights era and of the history of strivings for human freedom in the last quarter of the 20th-century US. Longtime Commission member Berry (and its chairman for 11 years) chronicles the Commission's history from its beginning in 1957 to the outset of the 21st century. Almost memoir-like at times and immensely documented based on deep research in both archival and secondary sources, the work bristles with the author's judgments about supporters and opponents of the Commission's work, from presidents to the common folk who testified before it. Berry is unsparing in her criticism of those who disagreed with her; even those presidents who were sympathetic much of the time (Lyndon Johnson) receive a poke or two when it seems justified. The very detailed narrative is backed by equally detailed footnotes that, at times, become fascinating reading in their own right. Readers will be exhausted by efforts to read carefully and absorb fully the study's contents, but making the attempt will be quite rewarding, especially for those interested in US domestic history over the past four or five decades. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All levels/libraries. J. F. Findlay emeritus, University of Rhode Island

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by New York Times Review

Crowds at the Prayer Pilgrimage for Freedom, Washington, May 1957. WHEN the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated 41 years ago, the civil rights movement lost both its leader and its way. In the macabre manner of such things, however, nonfiction literature gained a protagonist of mythic proportion. The best books about the black freedom struggle - David Garrow's biography, "Bearing the Cross"; Taylor Branch's narrative trilogy; Nick Kotz's "Judgment Days"; James Cone's "Martin and Malcolm and America" - rely on the totemic person of King to embody the political and spiritual campaign and to make the pages turn. In these instances, the Great Man theory of history happens to serve art as well. So Mary Frances Berry faces some substantial obstacles in trying to animate the comparatively more diffuse leadership and more amorphous saga of the United States Commission on Civil Rights, her subject in "And Justice for All." The commission's is a story without a single dominant figure or even a single narrative line to pull together all the disparate threads, the way the Brown v. Board of Education case did in Richard Kluger's classic account, "Simple Justice." The commission's work consists largely of holding hearings and writing reports, a great many reports. Its half-century duration stretches from the moral clarity of the fight against Southern segregation in the 1950s and '60s to the more ambiguous, muddled landscape of America in the last generation, when the emergence of a growing black middle class, the embrace of diversity in the corporate sector and the recognition of all sorts of mixed-race identities (including our new president's) have offered evidence that at least some of the battles can be considered over. An author's strategy in rendering these events, of course, cannot be to warp the historical record just to suit aesthetic purposes. But neither should a reader be expected to suspend the desire to be engaged simply because the content of a volume is capital-I important. "And Justice for All" is a respectable work that too often feels like an obligation, a requirement, on the part of the author as well as the reader. That the commission deserves a book is not the issue here. Since being created under the 1957 civil rights law, the first one passed since Reconstruction, the commission has served simultaneously as a monitor of and an advocate for such legislation. Armed with subpoena power, it has looked into conflicts and controversies ranging from the intimidation of black voters in the Deep South to educational inequality in the North to the lack of opportunities for women in sports to the fatal shooting of an unarmed innocent, Amadou Diallo, by New York City police officers. Berry, a professor of American social thought at the University of Pennsylvania and the author of eight previous books, served on the commission from 1980 until 2004 and was one of several members whom President Ronald Reagan tried to fire as part of an overall backlash against civil rights activism. (President George W. Bush ultimately succeeded in ousting her.) Berry's dual roles as author and participant give "And Justice for All" an awkwardly divided personality. For the first half of the book, which deals with the years before her appointment, she functions as a traditional academic historian; in the second half, she becomes a necessarily self-interested memoirist. The unintended consequence is that some of the most powerful episodes in the commission's history receive the most dispassionate treatment, while seemingly all the minutiae during Berry's period receive lengthy attention. One unexpected revelation in the book may help explain the second problem. In 1999, Berry successfully persuaded the Clinton administration to appoint her editor at Alfred A. Knopf, Victoria Wilson, to an open seat on the commission. It could be that Wilson herself became so absorbed in the inside-baseball of the commission that she, like her author, lost perspective on how much a reasonable reader wants or needs to know about a given battle between liberals and conservatives over who should be named the next staff director. At its outset, in contrast, the commission was reviled by Senator Harry F. Byrd Sr. of Virginia as "a vehicle for witch hunting at its worst." When commission members went to Alabama in 1958 to investigate violations of voting rights, they had to stay on an Air Force base because every local hotel was segregated. The testimonies that the commission heard in those early days contained horrors capable of shaming a nation - that of a black veteran, for instance, who was shot in the back and paralyzed by an Alabama police chief and then denied his Army pension for supposedly having provoked the attack. A reader - this reader, anyway longs for a fuller, deeper account of how the commissioners handled the physical and political risks of finding facts in a lethally hostile environment. Only intermittently does one particular commissioner, the Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh, then the president of Notre Dame, leap vividly from Berry's dryly dutiful account. Losing his temper during a hearing about school desegregation in Maryland in 1970, Father Hesburgh declared, "This commission has had it up to here with counties and communities that have to be dragged kicking and screaming into the U.S. Constitution." Still, as Berry recounts investigation after investigation, report after report, the impact of the commission feels like less rather than more. A far shorter-lived body, the Kerner Commission (formally known as the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders), left behind a clearer, more memorable legacy with a report warning, "Our nation is moving toward two societies, one black, one white - separate and unequal." CLOSER to the present, some of the civil rights commission's disputes with conservative foes have been significant. As Ronald Reagan basks in a posthumous, bipartisan glow, it's very instructive to be reminded by Berry of the divisive racial politics he practiced with the commission. In a move that anticipated President George H. W. Bush's nomination of Clarence Thomas to the Supreme Court a decade later, Reagan installed as commission chairman Clarence Pendleton Jr., a black conservative opposed to much of the civil rights agenda, affirmative action in particular. Administration officials described the commissioners they inherited as a "pocket of renegades that needed to be cleaned out." The staff and budget were drastically cut. Would that Berry had been more discerning about which battles might have benefited from more explanation and which ones could have been omitted altogether. And in the style of the score-settling Washington memoir, she reduces her antagonists (Linda Chavez, Abigail Thernstrom, Michael Horowitz) to two-dimensional caricatures. Agree with them or not, these people are not mindless enemies of equality. Reviewing a book is not reviewing a life. For her public service on behalf of racial justice, Mary Frances Berry deserves her many accolades. But on the evidence of "And Justice for All," she may have been the wrong person to tell a story that obviously matters to her so deeply. Samuel G. Freedman, a religion columnist for The Times, is writing a book about football and civil rights at two black colleges in the 1960s.

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [October 27, 2009]
Review by Booklist Review

Berry, former chair and longest-serving member of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, examines the struggle of this body to maintain its independence in monitoring the U.S. government and encouraging the nation to remain true to its ideals of equality. Started in 1957, the commission became the nation's conscience during the civil rights struggles of the 1960s. Although Democratic presidents, including Carter and Clinton, have had their difficulties with the commission, it was Reagan and both presidents Bush who sought to undercut the commission's independent fact-finding and reporting functions in favor of complete support for their administrations' policies. Although race, particularly discrimination against blacks, was the initial focus, over time attention shifted to other minorities, as well as women, gays, and the disabled. However, in later years, Berry notes a more politically partisan slant to the commission. She recommends that the commission both refocus on its original commitment and expand its scope to both civil and human rights so that America's compliance can be placed in the context of international human rights standards to provide some much-needed self-criticism.--Ford, Vernon Copyright 2009 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Library Journal Review

A professor of American social thought at the University of Pennsylvania, Berry served on the U.S. Civil Rights Commission for 20 years. Here she gives us the first real history in decades. With a six-city tour. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The U.S. Civil Rights Commission's former chairperson cheers what it once was and laments what it has become. Berry (American Social Thought/Univ. of Pennsylvania; My Face is Black is True, 2005, etc.) set out to document the commission rather than write a memoir of her time as a member. Still, the book works best when it combines her personal story with the institution's history. Amid worsening racial conflict, the Civil Rights Act of 1957 established the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights as an independent, bipartisan fact-finding agency with the power to subpoena. Intended only as temporary window-dressing for the Eisenhower administration, the commission resolutely stuck around and established itself as the nation's conscience on civil rights. Initially focused on the plight of African-Americans in the South, it produced reports and recommendations that drove the key civil-rights legislation of the mid-'60s. It took on discrimination more broadly in the '70s, battling the Nixon administration along the way. Although the 1976 election of Jimmy Carter promised a new era of cooperation, the commission remained underappreciated. Appointed by Carter in 1980, Berry soon faced President Reagan's attempts to pack the committee with his own supporters. She was fired in 1983, then reinstated under pressure, although Reagan continued to assault the commission's independence. Civil-rights advocates were resilient enough to secure passage of the Disabilities Act of 1990 and the Civil Rights Act of 1991. President Clinton appointed Berry chairperson of the commission in 1993. Even with minimal funding, her commission produced numerous reports and recommendations, and investigated the voting-rights violations that occurred in Florida during the 2000 presidential election. In 2004, however, the White House and Congress united to undermine the commission once again, and President Bush effectively fired Berry that year. At that point, she decided to write this book. Both a history and a call for a new offensive against discrimination, it ends by recommending a revitalized commission on civil and human rights. An unflinching look at America's disengagement with civil rights. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
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