

#31984
Mentioned in 2 episodes
Until Justice Be Done
Book • 2021
Kate Masur's book, *Until Justice Be Done*, provides a comprehensive history of the first civil rights movement in the United States.
It explores how Black and White Americans worked together to challenge racist laws and institutions from the Revolution through the 1870s.
The book highlights the struggles faced by free Black people in Northern states and the efforts of activists to achieve legal equality, laying groundwork for future civil rights movements.
It explores how Black and White Americans worked together to challenge racist laws and institutions from the Revolution through the 1870s.
The book highlights the struggles faced by free Black people in Northern states and the efforts of activists to achieve legal equality, laying groundwork for future civil rights movements.
Mentioned by
Mentioned in 2 episodes
Recommended by the podcast hosts as a book about the run-up to the Civil War that was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize.

106 snips
The Atextual & Illegal Attack on Birthright Citizenship
Mentioned by 

when introducing 

as the author of the book.


Don Wildman


Kate Masur

11 snips
The Supreme Court’s WORST Ever Case: Dred Scott v Sandford
Recommended by ![undefined]()

when listing notable histories of African American activism and abolition-era scholarship.

Jay! Tomlinson

#1774 Monthly-ish Mix: Who's in Charge?—The Scramble for Control of Nations, Bodies, and Minds
Mentioned by 

, it explores the efforts of free Black Americans before the Civil War to fight for their rights.


Jamelle Bouie

#1770 Getting in the Fight Against ICE and Authoritarianism






