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Hardcover Lift Every Voice: Turning a Civil Rights Setback Into a New Vision of Social Justice Book

ISBN: 0684811456

ISBN13: 9780684811451

Lift Every Voice: Turning a Civil Rights Setback Into a New Vision of Social Justice

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

In 1993, shortly after his inauguration, new President Bill Clinton nominated his old friend and classmate Lani Guinier to the prestigious and crucial post of Assistant Attorney General for Civil... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

wonderful book

lani guinier's story marks the beginning of the awful, underhanded politics of smear that have only gotten worse in recent years. she is wise and resilient. it's a reminder that we all have to stay engaged to rescue the American process, no matter what the mudslinging.

Visionary, Hopeful, Stragetic: Mandatory Reading

Professor Guinier has seen beyond the veil which seems to have fallen over the civil rights movement for the past thirty years. Guinier uses the story of her dis-appointment (her phrase) by the Clinton Administration to expose the inner workings of the political system and clarify her views. In so doing, she lays out a strategy that is simple, obvious, and doable. While so many "leaders" have been busy listening to one another, Guinier has been able to hear a still, small, powerful voice. This book is a must read for anyone who cares about democracy.

While reading this book, outstanding black women ...

who come to mind include... Barbaara Jordan, Angela Davis, Represtntative Jackson (Texas)... especially when support for outstanding people like Lani Guinier is needed. "Where were they (those so-called black influential leaders) when their help was needed ... probably doing the Ostrich thing, along with the usual commenusrating that can always be expected in those little private circles. The ones we respected and would be guided by in the 60's are yet to be developed for the 21st Century. Lani's book is a classic that I will pass on.

Excellent look at post-Selma Civil Rights in America.

This book is an fine discourse on what America has - or should have - learned about the search for social justice in the quarter century since the Civil Rights marches of the 1960s. Lani Guinier is best known for her ill-fated candidacy to become the first African American and female Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights. She provides a spell-binding blow by blow account of what it was like to be nominated, then cast aside in the political jockeying that followed the 1992 election of Bill Clinton to the presidency. It is a poignant tale of how ordinary people on the fringes of her battle to get a hearing in Congress stepped in to insure that she never lost her sense of professionalism, her commitment to the truth, or her right to be treated with dignity. Her ideas on reforming voting procedures, the very ones that foiled her nomination in Congress, are well worth reading, and clearly worth implementing in an age of voter apathy and political gerymandering. The theme is broader, however, and in this book she demonstrates how thoroughly she has paid her dues over the years laboring for justice in America. As a civil rights lawyer in the 70s and 80s she went back to Alabama, Mississippi, Texas and other southern states to pick up where the civil rights movement of the 60s left off. Her talent for getting people to listen to the messages embodied in unfamiliar language and cultural expression is a gift to us all. Her story is full of important new insights into the nature of cross-cultural communication. She proclaims from her own experiences a critical need for wide-open discussion of social issues. Lawyers, she asserts, cannot win civil rights cases without the active participation of the public, and she calls for a return to grass-roots activism as a means to achieving social justice. Guinier is superbly analytical, a true listener, and a fine writer.

This is a wake-up call that had to be sounded.

Prof. Guinier has sounded a call to all concerned Americans, not just African-Americans, to be alert and aware of the continued injustices being being imposed upon the "silent minority". Our AAABC (African-American Authors Book Club) group chose this book to review for our May session. Everyone in attendance agreed this was a most timely and informative expose on the true climate of civil rights today. Prof. Guinier helped us to understand some of the "behind closed doors" politics that go on every day. She further enlightens us on the provocative slants the media can put on issues in order to further hidden agendas. We thought, during the time of her nominaton, that she was not being treated the same as the other candidates, but, we never really understood why nor did we understand what was really happening. Now we DO know and understand. Now we also realize that we should never again stand by without making our voices heard when we see this type of injustice happen. (We know it will happen again.) Thanks Lani, for telling your story (our story), as a woman with an issue and "not a grievance".
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