Monday, January 5, 2009

Thurgood Marshall or The New Asian Hemisphere

Thurgood Marshall: American Revolutionary

Author: Juan Williams

This New York Times Notable Book of the Year, 1998, is now in trade paper.

From the bestselling author of Eyes on the Prize, here is the definitive biography of the great lawyer and Supreme Court justice.

Newsweek

Revelatory.

Los Angeles Times

Riveting.

Washington Monthly - David J. Garrow

His portrait of Marshall is rich and valuable.

Washington Post Book World - Ronald K. L. Collins

Thurgood Marshall is remarkable in its vivid and detailed account of its subject....To read this book is to learn how a great lawyer can bring about great social changes and yet remain within the law.

The New York Times - Richard Bernstein

...[T]he first major biography of Marshall....his text is sprinkled with Marshall's own breezy comments on key incidents in his life....The Marshall who emerges...is in many ways an American revolutionary...but a more conservative revolutionary that his common image would suggest....Marshall's life, in short, was a seminal one for 20th-century American history, and it is well told in Mr. Williams' readable and important book.

Randall Kennedy

...[W]ill provide grist to both celebrants and detractors [of Marshall]....In a book that is about 400 pages long, only about 70 pages are devoted to Marshall's career as a Justice....Coming of age at a time when black professionals were openly mocked, he pursued his ambitions to the hilt and acomplished...much more...than peers to whom every privilege had been extended. —The New Republic

Publishers Weekly

Thirteen years before becoming the first African-American justice on the Supreme Court, Thurgood Marshall's place in American history was secured, with his victory over school segregation in Brown v. Board of Education. Williams (Eyes on the Prize) offers readers a thorough, straightforward life of "the unlikely leading actor in creating social change in the United States in the twentieth century." Although he was denied access to the files of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, where Marshall devoted more than 40 years of his law career, and worked without the cooperation of Marshall's family, Williams has managed to fill in the blanks with over 150 interviews, including lengthy sessions with Marshall himself in 1989. Marshall is portrayed as an outspoken critic of black militancy and nonviolent demonstrations. Williams mentions, but does not dwell on, Marshall's history of heavy drinking, womanizing and sexual harassment. But his private contacts with J. Edgar Hoover and the FBI, even while that organization was working to discredit Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X, receives critical attention. This relationship "could have cost him his credibility among civil rights activists had it become known," writes Williams. Likewise, it would appear that his extra-legal activities and charges of incompetence and Communist connections would, if publicized, have kept him from the Supreme Court, as he himself admitted. Nevertheless, this work will stand as an accessible and fitting tribute to a champion of individual rights and "the architect of American race relations."

KLIATT

Thurgood Marshall embodied the struggle for civil rights in the 20th century as played out in the U.S. courts of law. Marshall, a man of strong character with fierce pride in his race, and a powerful legal contender, held to his principles in the face of opposition from both whites and blacks. Never one to back down from a legal battle, Marshall knew which cases were the ones to pursue, for he was both an idealist and a pragmatist. Juan Williams, a national correspondent for The Washington Post (now host for NPR's "Talk of the Nation") describes Marshall as an integrationist who believed that if blacks and whites could work and study together freely, racial harmony would occur. He pursued his dream through the courtroom as he battled to desegregate schools at all education levels. While he is best remembered for his successful handling of Brown v. Board of Education, Marshall defended countless other cases as chief lawyer for the NAACP. Through sheer determination he continued his battle for racial equality, using his position as the first black Supreme Court justice to hammer home his belief in the rule of law and the legal system. This view often led him into disagreement not only with other civil rights leaders with their nonviolent sit-ins and boycotts but also with the militants in the Nation of Islam. Referred to as "Mr. Civil Rights" by many in law and government because of his legal advocacy for racial justice, Marshall is well serviced by Williams' biography. As a larger-than-life figure who made many enemies as he battled for racial equality, Marshall never lost his belief that the orderly process of law was the road to a democratic system for all people. In this detailedaccount Williams gives us the complete, unabashed picture of a truly original American who overcame racial and social obstacles to bring down barriers of segregation. KLIATT Codes: A—Recommended for advanced students, and adults. 1998, Random House/Times Books, 461p, 21cm, 98-9735, $16.00. Ages 17 to adult. Reviewer: Mary T. Gerrity; Libn., Queen Anne Sch., Upper Marlboro, MD, July 2000 (Vol. 34 No. 4)

Library Journal

These two books about a giant in U.S. legal and political history mirror each other in myriad ways, detailing the history of the NAACP, the rise of Jim Crow, lynchings, etc. Ball's (political science, Univ. of Vermont) study contains more legal lingo, which makes for a less interesting read, while Williams's portrait is more revealing of the private side of the justice.

The New York Times Book Review - David K. Shipler

The story of his extraordinary life contains a measure of our history. . .which takes us to the heights of decency one moment and to the depths of bigotry the next. . . .[The book] offers little from Marshall's briefs, opinions and dissents. . . .[It] captures the sweep of Marshall's impact beyond the civil rights movement. . . .he expanded the rights of all Americans.

WQ: The Wilson Quarterly - Elisabeth Lasch-Quinn

...[A] lively and readable introduction to the justice's personal and professional life, drawing on Marshall's correspondence, other primary documents, and extensive interviews...proceeds case by case through Marshall's extensive legal career...

National Review - John O. McGinnis

[The] book is most successful in recreating the vanished world of Marshall's upbringing. . . .[it] is at its weakest in its discussion of Marshall's years on the court.

Biography

Juan Williams' accessible, and often powerful portrait of the justice captures the truly revolutionary quality of this figure in American history. . .

Time Magazine - Jack E White

....[R]eminds us that there is a difference between the hair-splitting legalisms that dominate the current headlines and the rule of law that changes history...richly detailed portrait, Marshall emerges as a born rebel...Williams also provides fresh insights into Marshall's ruthless role in the organization's tortured internal politics.

Kirkus Reviews

Written with the cooperation of its subject, this is a solid, comprehensive biography that brings into focus a historical giant who has, sadly, faded from view.

As his subtitle suggests, former Washington Post reporter Williams (author of the best-selling Eyes on the Prize), is interested foremost in Thurgood Marshall's role as the leader "of a burgeoning social revolution" during the early years of the civil rights movement. What's surprising is how deeply opposed the brilliant lawyer was to the other two members of what Williams dubs "the black triumvirate." Marshall disdained Martin Luther King Jr.'s non-violent protests as ineffective and resented the media attention King garnered; he saw Malcolm X as a destructive thug. Reviewing Marshall's stunning impact on the nation's legal system first as the NAACP's chief counsel, later as President Lyndon Johnson's solicitor general, and finally as the first black Supreme Court justice Williams dramatically and persuasively makes the case that Marshall, the man who ended legal segregation with his landmark Brown v. Board of Education victory, is by far the most important of the three. Though Marshall's string of legal victories brought him fame as a crusader and savior of his race during the 1950s, he was rejected by militant black-power advocates in the late '60s, when his gradualism and respect for law and order were out of step with the times.

Williams does a good job of bringing alive the private Marshall, a necessary task, since the justice's seclusion during the last 30 years of his life removed him from the public eye. A confirmed drinker and womanizer, Marshall was a charismatic man whose gift of gab was equally useful for negotiating political tightropes, neutralizing critics like J. Edgar Hoover, or putting bigoted southern sheriffs at ease. Williams is uncritical of Marshall's personal flaws, but his reconstruction of Marshall makes for a lively and immensely valuable portrait of a first-rate legal mind and true American hero.

What People Are Saying

Bob Dole
Williams gives readers a dynamic work to savor and study.


Maya Angelou
A careful and engrossing account of Thurgood Marshall's true life.




Table of Contents:
ACKNOWLEDGMENTSxi
INTRODUCTIONxv
FAMILY TREExix
1. Right Time, Right Man?3
2. A Fighting Family15
3. Educating Thurgood24
4. Waking Up40
5. Turkey52
6. His Own Man61
7. Getting Started75
8. Leaving Home86
9. 69 Fifth Avenue93
10. Marshall in Charge101
11. Pan of Bones113
12. The War Years122
13. Lynch Mob for a Lawyer131
14. Jim Crow Buster143
15. Groveland152
16. Lessons in Politics158
17. On the Front Line167
18. Direct Attack174
19. Number OneNegro of All Time187
20. Planning a Revolt195
21. Case of the Century209
22. No Radical228
23. Martin Luther King, Jr245
24. Machiavellian Marshall253
25. The Second Civil War263
26. Marshall and the Militants275
27. Exit Time284
28. Black Robes296
29. Johnson's Man313
30. Justice Marshall332
31. Backlash on the Court353
32. Hangin' On374
33. Resurrection397
NOTES405
RESOURCES AND BIBLIOGRAPHY431
PRINCIPAL CASES CITED437
INDEX441

Go to: Subject to Change or Cyberjustice

The New Asian Hemisphere: The Irresistible Shift of Global Power to the East

Author: Kishore Mahbubani

For two centuries Asians have been bystanders in world history, reacting defenselessly to the surges of Western commerce, thought, and power. That era is over. Asia is returning to the center stage it occupied for eighteen centuries before the rise of the West.

By 2050, three of the world’s largest economies will be Asian: China, India, and Japan. In The New Asian Hemisphere, Kishore Mahbubani argues that Western minds need to step outside their “comfort zone” and prepare new mental maps to understand the rise of Asia. The West, he says, must gracefully share power with Asia by giving up its automatic domination of global institutions from the IMF to the World Bank, from the G7 to the UN Security Council. Only then will the new Asian powers reciprocate by becoming responsible stakeholders in a stable world order.

Newsweek International

[Mahbubani] makes powerful arguments that will be at the center of global politics and economics well into this century.



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