We're seeing lots of interesting and important material emerge and re-emerge thanks to the Black Lives movement, and one of the pieces of info most worth checking out is the brief William Greaves documentary Ida B. Wells: A Passion for Justice (1989). Though her name is by no means a household word, it should be, at least among journalists: She was probably the leading Black newspaper writer and columnist of her early 20th-century era (roughly 1880-1930) rising to the role of editor/publisher of the leading Black newspaper in Memphis; she took on many dangerous issues, in particular the horror of lynching, at great personal (and financial) risk; ultimately she moved to Chicago and continued her career as a lifelong advocate for the rights of Black people - becoming a hugely influential advocate and a national leader on civil rights. Greaves does a great job conveying the sense of her life and times with many stills of newspaper graphics and archival photographs, some of them painful to look at; Wells left behind not only her journalism and a diary or memoir with details about all of the activism and advocacy; Toni Morrison reads sections from Wells's writings, which gives this film a real voice of hope and courage.
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