Bluff City: The Secret Life of Photographer Ernest Withers

Bluff City: The Secret Life of Photographer Ernest Withers

by Preston Lauterbach
Bluff City: The Secret Life of Photographer Ernest Withers

Bluff City: The Secret Life of Photographer Ernest Withers

by Preston Lauterbach

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Overview

The little-known story of an iconic photographer, whose work captured—and influenced—a critical moment in American history.

Ernest Withers took some of the most legendary images of the 1950s and ’60s: Martin Luther King, Jr., riding a newly integrated bus in Montgomery, Alabama; Emmett Till’s uncle pointing an accusatory finger across the courtroom at his nephew’s killer; scores of African-American protestors carrying a forest of signs reading “i am a man.” But at the same time, Withers was working as an FBI informant. In this gripping narrative history, Preston Lauterbach examines the complicated political and economic forces that informed Withers’s seeming betrayal of the people he photographed, and “does a masterful job of telling the story of civil rights in Memphis in the 1960s” (Ed Ward, Financial Times), including the events surrounding Dr. King’s tumultuous final march in Memphis.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780393358087
Publisher: Norton, W. W. & Company, Inc.
Publication date: 07/14/2020
Pages: 368
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.30(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

Preston Lauterbach is the author of Bluff City, Beale Street Dynasty, The Chitlin’ Circuit, a Wall Street Journal and Boston Globe book of the year, and co-author of Brother Johnson: Growing Up with Robert Johnson. He is a former visiting scholar at Rhodes College and a Virginia Humanities Fellow. He lives in Virginia.

Table of Contents

I Don't Touch Anything 1

II Pictures Tell the Story 19

III Holding On to Jerusalem Slim 105

IV I AM A MAN 199

Afterword 291

Acknowledgments 299

Notes 305

Index 321

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