Ida B. Wells They Say

808 Words2 Pages

Amy Woelfel Book review of They Say by James West Davidson The century long question of what it means to truly be a freed person is argued and examined throughout the entirety of They Say. In this novel we read a story of not just one woman’s person development and journey to achieve ultimate freedom, but that of an entire population during this Reconstructive Era after the Emancipation Proclamation. The freedom of slaves throughout the United States in the nineteenth century left hundreds of thousands of people with the need and desire for purpose and creation of their own identity, separate from the labels that previously constrained them. They Say takes Ida B. Well’s life story and her struggles with the issues of race and weaved them …show more content…

B Wells, born to parents whom were slaves in Mississippi, grew up having to face the aftermath of prejudice and unfair treatment of African Americans in the years following the Emancipation Proclamation. Wells experienced what it meant to be a “freed” slave in the United States, where one was not treated as so. Now that one couldn’t be separated as “free” and “slave”, separations were made solely on the color of one’s skin. She had a hunger for knowledge and learning, something that African Americans had previously been prevented from attaining. Knowledge is a sure fire way to set oneself apart from others and is absolutely necessary in order to make something of oneself. Wells was always taking on opportunities to learn and did not give into societal pressures and certain ideas if she did not believe it to be true or right. Ida B. Wells had to grow up at a very young age to provide for her siblings, as she was left orphaned due to yellow fever. Having received schooling at a young age, Wells was able to land a teaching position later in life. (Ch.4) Well began to become more politically and socially charged when she herself was forced to move from a first class seat she paid for on a bus to a section reserved for African Americans. This turning point in Ida’s life led her to journalism, an outlet she used to share her frustrations and opinions on civil rights. Ida B. Wells became one of the loudest opponents of lynching, a practice that was widely used throughout the United

Open Document