Ann Field Alexander is Professor of History at Mary Baldwin College and director of the College's regional center in Roanoke, Virginia.
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Description
Race Man provides a welcome addition to the growing body of works that take us beyond Washington and Du Bois in exploring African American responses to Jim Crow and disfranchisement . . . Specialists and generalists interested in African American history, the history of Richmond, the history of journalism, or southern biography will find this work rewarding. Like all good history, it both answers and raises questions as it expands our comprehension of the complexity and ambiguity of human existence." - History: Reviews of New Books "Alexander has resurrected Mitchell." - Virginia Magazine of History & Biography "Alexander explores ardent complexities inherent during the eras of racial uplift and white supremacy in the South. . . As a cultural historian, [she] takes into account a breadth of influences that touched the lives of Mitchell and his contemporaries. The historical tapestry in which they lived included strands of gender, economics, southern politics, an emerging black middle-class, and the social institutions of churches and fraternal orders within the black community. Finding ways to make viable contributions and walk life with dignity, around the boundaries of Jim Crow, proved to be ever-present challenges for Mitchell." - American Journalism