In the 1950s and 1960s, pioneering journalist Ethel Lois Payne, Washington correspondent for the Chicago Defender, elevated civil rights issues to the national agenda. She raised challenging questions at presidential press conferences about matters of importance to African Americans. She publicly prodded President Dwight D. Eisenhower to support desegregation, and her reporting on legislative and judicial civil rights battles enlightened and motivated black readers. At some considerable personal risk, Payne covered such events as the Montgomery bus boycott, the desegregation of the University of Alabama, and the Little Rock school crisis. She also traveled overseas to write about the service of black troops in Vietnam and accompanied American leaders on diplomatic missions to Africa.
President Lyndon B. Johnson recognized Payne’s seminal role by presenting her with pens used in the signing of the Civil Rights Act and the Voting Rights Act. As a trailblazing black woman in an industry dominated by white men, she capped her career by becoming the first female African American radio and television commentator on a national network, working for CBS.
From Alabama to Ghana, from Indonesia to Vietnam, her reporting eschewed the emotionless objective style coveted by mainstream publications of her time. She became for many black Americans their eyes on the frontlines of the struggle for equality. Inspiring and instructive, Eye on the Struggle celebrates this extraordinary woman and her achievements—and reminds us of the power one person has to transform our lives and our world.
“Beautifully written and carefully researched.” —Chicago Tribune
“A fast-paced tour through the highlights of 20th-century African American history, with Payne as witness.” —The Boston Globe
“Engrossing.” —The New York Times
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January 17, 2024 -
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Kirkus
December 1, 2014
Biographer Morris (Pulitzer: A Life in Politics, Print, and Power, 2010, etc.) resurrects the career of Ethel Payne (1911-1991), journalist, labor union and civil rights advocate, traveler on the African continent, journalism professor and pioneer in the American race wars.Struggling to obtain a formal education during an era when women, especially African-American women, found most schooling off-limits, Payne did not find her calling as a journalist until she was nearly 40. Before that, she labored in a Chicago library and found employment in Japan helping African-American military personnel stationed by the Pentagon adjust to life abroad. All along, she wanted to become a writer. Growing up in Chicago, Payne was aware of the Chicago Defender, the most prominent newspaper in the country owned by an African-American and devoted to writing about them from a perspective radically different from that of the Caucasian-owned media. While working in Japan in 1950, Payne met a Defender reporter who had served the United States during World War II and at the time was writing about the role of African-American soldiers in the Korean War. Payne, an impressive individual by any standard, parlayed the acquaintanceship into a salaried job. During a journalism career that began at the Defender and resumed there after a hiatus caused by the newspaper's sometimes-mercurial publisher, Payne wrote about U.S. presidents, African nations, the Vietnam War and her hometown of Chicago. Due to her gender and race, Payne always stood out at presidential press conferences and just about everywhere else, but she rarely flinched from any obstacles that stood in the way of the story. Morris does not flinch from his status as a white male chronicling the life of an African-American female, and he discloses that he received unstinting support from Payne's family members and acquaintances. His access allows him to reveal intriguing subtleties about her work and her personal life. A deeply researched, skillfully written biography about a previously underappreciated individual.COPYRIGHT(2014) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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Library Journal
November 1, 2014
A biography of Ethel Payne, who broke new ground as the Washington correspondent for the Chicago Defender during the 1950s and 1960s and later became the first black female commentator on a national radio and television network.
Copyright 2014 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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Booklist
Starred review from February 1, 2015
Morris (Pulitzer: A Life in Politics, Print, and Power, 2010) is the first to tell barrier-breaking journalist Ethel Payne's (191191) complete story in Eye on the Struggle: Ethel Payne, the First Lady of the Black Press. Among this biography's many disclosures is the crucial role this book-loving daughter of a Pullman porterand constant patron of her South Side Chicago public library branchplayed in the success of the Chicago Defender, a tremendously influential African American newspaper distributed in the Jim Crow South by Pullman porters. Harassed on her way to high school when she passed through a white neighborhood, Payne was encouraged to write by her English teacher, who had also taught Ernest Hemingway. Payne had stories published in a Defender spinoff, Abbott's Monthly, while she attended the Chicago Public Library Training School and became a junior library assistant. After qualifying for a government-documents librarian post at the U.S. Department of Justice, she was turned away because of her race. In a neat turnaround, Payne signed on as an assistant service club director, shipping out to an army post in Japan in 1948. There, intrepid, ever-curious, and truth-seeking, Payne investigated the plight of the stigmatized children of black GIs and Japanese women. She lost her military job when the Chicago Defender published her expos' but was hired by the paper. Thanks to Alice Dunnigan's mentoring, Payne established a presence in Washington, D.C., quickly ascending as the Defender's unquestioned star political reporter . . . and civil rights authority, until the paper abruptly closed its Washington office in 1958. After stints with the AFL-CIO and the Democratic National Committee, Payne returned to journalism as the first African American correspondent covering the Vietnam War and the first African American reporter invited to China. Morris' straight-ahead chronicle of Payne's extraordinary front-line life reveals how invincible and incisive she was as she forthrightly combined journalism with advocacy and made the most of the box seat on history she fought so ardently and courageously to occupy.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2015, American Library Association.) -
Library Journal
February 1, 2015
African American newspapers arose to cover issues of concern that were ignored by mainstream media outlets. Ethel Payne (1911-91), a pioneering journalist, covered the civil rights movement for The Chicago Defender, a premier black newspaper. Biographer Morris (Pulitzer) details Payne's work, preserving her legacy and filling in part of the missing history of the fight for equality. Payne arrived in Washington, DC, as the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision challenged the future of segregation. She stepped into her journalistic role by confronting President Dwight Eisenhower with questions on racial issues, along with reporting on prominent politicians and civil rights leaders from the 1950s until her death. Payne traveled frequently, venturing to the South to cover key civil rights events, to South Africa with vice president Nixon to interview Nelson Mandela, and to Vietnam to document the experience of African American troops. Above all, she witnessed the signing of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and was a lifelong activist. VERDICT The rich use of sources and glimpses of Payne's personal life will engage readers interested in civil rights, journalism, and women's history.--Judy Solberg, Sacramento, CA
Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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