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Douglas a blackmon
Douglas a blackmon




the Harvard School of Law and the Clinton and Lincoln Presidential Libraries. He has elctured recently at Yale University. It received a 2009 American Book Award and a Freedom Fund Award from the NAACP.īlackmon is co-executive producer of a documentary film based on "Slavery By Another Name," scheduled for PBS broadcast in 2011. The book was a national bestseller and wqas accalimed as a "relentless and fascinating" work by The New York Times.

douglas a blackmon

corporations and commercial interests in coal mines, timber camps, factories and farms in cities across the South, beginning after the end of the Civil War and continuing to the start of World War II.

douglas a blackmon

It revealed for the first time how the use of forced labor by dozens of U.S. "Slavery by Another Name" grew out of his 2001 Journal article on slave labor. Born in Leland, Mississippi, he was graduated from high school in Monticello, Arkansas and received his undergraduate degree from Hendrix College in Arkansas.He joined the Journal staff in 1995 after working for newspapers in Little Rock, Arkansas, and Atlanta. He was the Journal's longtime Atlanta bureau chief, overseeing news coverage in 11 southern states, and in late 2009, he was named the newspaper's Senior National Correspondent, and directs the coverage of subjects ranging from race and politics to business and culture. Over the last 25 years, Blackmon has written extensively about distinctly American issues of race, exploring topics from the integration of Mississippi schools during his childhood in a Mississippi Delta farm town to the struggle of a contemporary society to come to terms with its troubled past. Blackmon is a writer for the Wall Street Journal who won the 2009 Pulitzer Prize for General Non-fiction for his book, "Slavery By Another Name: The Re-enslavement of Black Americans from the Civil War to World War II." That book has been chosen by the Georgia Center for the Book for inclusion on its 2010 list of "25 Books All Georgians Should Read." A native of Leland, Mississippi, Doug Blackmon is chair of the Miller Center Forum at the University of Virginia and a contributing correspondent to the Washington Post.

douglas a blackmon

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Douglas a blackmon