“Through stunning readings of Wells-Barnett’s autobiography . . . and meticulous social history, Schechter not only has produced the best and most serious analysis of this protean figure but also has enriched our understanding of the politics of the body.” — Journal of American History
“A provocative study that goes far beyond Wells-Barnett as a leader in the anti-lynching movement. . . . Schechter emphasizes the importance of religious faith and religious institutions in all aspects of Wells-Barnett’s career. . . . Perhaps the most interesting part of this fascinating book is Schechter’s careful analysis and deconstruction of Wells-Barnett’s autobiography, unfinished and unpublished during her lifetime.” — American Historical Review
“A challenging account of Ida B. Wells-Barnett that emphasizes her role in social reform and race relations. This historical biography of Wells-Barnett’s accomplishments and frustrations provides new perspectives on the 'age of reform' in the United States, and it does so without romanticizing the era.” — Journal of Southern History
“The research Patricia Schechter exhibits in this book — academically first-rate, readable nonetheless for nonacademic audiences — has no business going unread, unrecognized. Her book is henceforth a benchmark in Wells studies.” — Memphis
“Ida B. Wells-Barnett and American Reform, 1880–1930 is more than a simple biography. It is a multilayered exposé of a society molded by racism, a people saddled with sexism, and one woman’s public and private struggle with both.” — Deborah Gray White, author of Too Heavy a Load: African American Women in Defense of Themselves, 1894–1994
“So profound and insightful are Schechter’s analyses of the interwoven dynamics of race and gender both in Wells-Barnett’s innovative critiques of lynching and in underlying gender assumptions about African American leadership that I would assess her work on Wells-Barnett as definitive. . . . The depth of insight and sensitivity of her analyses of black leadership and gender politics are unsurpassed.” — Kevin K. Gaines, University of Michigan
“[This] is an ambitious interpretive study of Wells-Barnett’s career as a reformer. It makes a persuasive case for her importance, even central importance, over a fifty-year period. . . . Schechter has broken new ground here.” — Barbara Sicherman, Trinity College
“Ida B. Wells-Barnett and American Reform, 1880–1930 manages to get behind the African American woman’s legendary veil of dissemblance to reveal the struggles of a pioneer who was as often at odds with herself as she was with the whites and men who structured her world.” — Deborah Gray White, author of Too Heavy a Load: African American Women in Defense of Themselves, 1894–1994