![]() | Bricks Without Straw Bricks Without Straw is Tourgée's fictionalized account of how Reconstruction was sabotaged. It is a chilling picture of violence against African Americans condoned, civil rights abrogated, constitutional amendments subverted, and electoral fraud institutionalized. Its plot revolves around a group of North Carolina freedpeople who strive to build new lives for themselves by buying land, marketing their own crops, setting up a church and school, and voting for politicians sympathetic to their interests, until Klan terrorism and the ascendancy of a white supremacist government reduce them to neo-slavery. This edition of Bricks Without Straw is enhanced by Carolyn L. Karcher's introduction, which sets the novel in historical context and provides an overview of Albion W. Tourgée's career, a chronology of the significant events of both the Reconstruction era and Tourgée's life, and explanatory notes identifying actual events fictionalized in the novel. Albion W. Tourgée (1838-1905) was a soldier, journalist, attorney, judge, and prolific author of books, including the novel A Fool's Errand, by One of the Fools (1879). As the lead attorney for the plaintiff in the landmark Supreme Court case Plessy v. Ferguson (1896), Tourgée argued against the "separate but equal" doctrine. Carolyn L. Karcher is Professor Emerita at Temple University, where she taught English, American studies, and women's studies. Among her books are The First Woman of the Republic: A Cultural Biography of Lydia Maria Child and A Lydia Maria Child Reader , both also published by Duke University Press. |
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