On Juneteenth

On Juneteenth

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  • Type:Epub+TxT+PDF+Mobi
  • Create Date:2021-05-03 18:31:37
  • Update Date:2025-09-07
  • Status:finish
  • Author:Annette Gordon-Reed
  • ISBN:1631498835
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Summary

Weaving together American history, dramatic family chronicle, and searing episodes of memoir, Annette Gordon-Reed’s On Juneteenth provides a historian’s view of the country’s long road to Juneteenth, recounting both its origins in Texas and the enormous hardships that African-Americans have endured in the century since, from Reconstruction through Jim Crow and beyond。 All too aware of the stories of cowboys, ranchers, and oilmen that have long dominated the lore of the Lone Star State, Gordon-Reed—herself a Texas native and the descendant of enslaved people brought to Texas as early as the 1820s—forges a new and profoundly truthful narrative of her home state, with implications for us all。


Combining personal anecdotes with poignant facts gleaned from the annals of American history, Gordon-Reed shows how, from the earliest presence of Black people in Texas to the day in Galveston on June 19, 1865, when Major General Gordon Granger announced the end of legalized slavery in the state, African-Americans played an integral role in the Texas story。


Reworking the traditional “Alamo” framework, she powerfully demonstrates, among other things, that the slave- and race-based economy not only defined the fractious era of Texas independence but precipitated the Mexican-American War and, indeed, the Civil War itself。


In its concision, eloquence, and clear presentation of history, On Juneteenth vitally revises conventional renderings of Texas and national history。 As our nation verges on recognizing June 19 as a national holiday, On Juneteenth is both an essential account and a stark reminder that the fight for equality is exigent and ongoing。

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Reviews

Cookie

Native Texan Annette Gordon-Reed share the history of Juneteenth and a few other important events in Texas history related to racism in this book。 She weaves in her own and her family's story into this look at those events。I thought this book was informative and I learned a lot of things about Texas history that I didn't know before。 It was a quick read and I wish it delved a little deeper into the topics。 I thought this was a good start for some basics in Texas history related to racism and on Native Texan Annette Gordon-Reed share the history of Juneteenth and a few other important events in Texas history related to racism in this book。 She weaves in her own and her family's story into this look at those events。I thought this book was informative and I learned a lot of things about Texas history that I didn't know before。 It was a quick read and I wish it delved a little deeper into the topics。 I thought this was a good start for some basics in Texas history related to racism and on Juneteenth。 Thank you to libro。fm for a gifted audiobook in exchange for an honest review。 。。。more

Jocelyn

An interesting mix of history, biography, and geography。 I like how Gordon-Reed weaves her family history and her love of Texas into a pretty clear summary and critique of what went on over the last few hundred years。 Its a quick read, but a good intro to her writing style。 I received a copy of this book in exchange for a review, but all opinions are my own。

Laura

Thank you to the publisher for an ARC to review!Juneteenth is at the forefront of national conversation。 An effort is being made to establish it as a national holiday。 But how many people understand the holiday in its context - that is, black Texan history? The author sets out to give the reader this context, along with anecdotes from her own life as a Texan。It seems like perhaps the five essays deviate from the actual subject of Juneteenth。 But, in truth, the history of Texas is given as a whol Thank you to the publisher for an ARC to review!Juneteenth is at the forefront of national conversation。 An effort is being made to establish it as a national holiday。 But how many people understand the holiday in its context - that is, black Texan history? The author sets out to give the reader this context, along with anecdotes from her own life as a Texan。It seems like perhaps the five essays deviate from the actual subject of Juneteenth。 But, in truth, the history of Texas is given as a whole to help the reader understand why this holiday has been celebrated in this particular space。 To help the reader understand that the history of a place is nuanced - that nothing is ever simple to explain。 History is a sum of its parts, and more parts are brought to life through research every day。Perhaps a book that only Annette Gordon-Reed could have written。 A memoir told from a historian’s perspective is always a joy to read。 Subjective, yes, but never hyperbolic。 A calm recollection and astounding, insightful questions come up in each essay。 What does it mean to be American? What does it mean to be Texan? What does it mean to be black in America and in Texas?This short collection of essays should be on everyone’s TBR pile for the summer。 。。。more

Noelle

eARC NetGalley reviewOn Juneteenth is a short collection of powerful essays on the history of Texas and what it means to be Black in America。 Gordon-Reed recounts her own experiences being a young Black girl in Texas through out these chapters and how when looking back at her childhood history classes, some information was romanticized or left out of the classrooms completely。 This book is overflowing with information in an easy-to-read prose。 Although I'm far from an expert, I now feel more com eARC NetGalley reviewOn Juneteenth is a short collection of powerful essays on the history of Texas and what it means to be Black in America。 Gordon-Reed recounts her own experiences being a young Black girl in Texas through out these chapters and how when looking back at her childhood history classes, some information was romanticized or left out of the classrooms completely。 This book is overflowing with information in an easy-to-read prose。 Although I'm far from an expert, I now feel more comfortable speaking about Texas' history, segregation/integration, and early explorers like Cabeza de Vaca and Estebanico。 I recommend this book to everyone。 Unless you're a scholar of early American and Texan history, this book is a must read。Thank you to the author, W。 W。 Norton & Company, and NetGalley for a copy of this eARC in exchange for an honest review。 。。。more

Rebecca Graham

newest – slightly more personal book – by Harvard law professor Annette Gordon-Reed, whose scholarship on Sally Hemings and Thomas Jefferson revolutionized early American historiography。 Gordon-Reed was born and raised in Texas, where her family descended from enslaved persons, celebrated Juneteenth annually, and endured the Jim Crow segregated South。 As a recent New York Times book review recounts, Gordon-Reed herself helped to integrate schools racially in her hometown。 This new book integrate newest – slightly more personal book – by Harvard law professor Annette Gordon-Reed, whose scholarship on Sally Hemings and Thomas Jefferson revolutionized early American historiography。 Gordon-Reed was born and raised in Texas, where her family descended from enslaved persons, celebrated Juneteenth annually, and endured the Jim Crow segregated South。 As a recent New York Times book review recounts, Gordon-Reed herself helped to integrate schools racially in her hometown。 This new book integrates the author’s intersectional perspective with a long history of marking the abolishment of enslavement in the Lone Star State 。。。more

Melissa

A fascinating little book

Irene

review for the Observer TK

Gina Gurganus

This was not the book I was expecting but it is still a very good read about race and the legacy of history, with a lot of personal perspectives from the author that help invoke reflection by the reader。。 or at least me。 This is a book I think everyone can learn something from which is reason enough to pick it up。 While I was hoping to learn more about the history leading up to and the evolution of Juneteenth it is so much more than that。。 Gordon-Reed takes the celebration of Juneteenth and buil This was not the book I was expecting but it is still a very good read about race and the legacy of history, with a lot of personal perspectives from the author that help invoke reflection by the reader。。 or at least me。 This is a book I think everyone can learn something from which is reason enough to pick it up。 While I was hoping to learn more about the history leading up to and the evolution of Juneteenth it is so much more than that。。 Gordon-Reed takes the celebration of Juneteenth and builds upon the topic to open the reader's eyes to so many different layers of Texas's history beyond what western movies portray。 I would have liked a little more of the true history of Juneteenth to be woven in (the last chapter of five is truly the only part that goes into this in my opinion, it is absolutely worth the read。Thank you to NetGalley, Liveright Press, and Annette Gordon-Reed for an advanced copy of the book in return for an honest review。 。。。more

Katie

An important look at how one day in history can make a difference to generations down the line。 Reed’s recollection of her past and reflections on how Juneteenth is widely celebrated on a national stage today shows the high value of freedom and family still present in local history。I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review。

Russell Fox

I picked up this tiny collection of essays (five essays with an introduction and a coda, spread out over 135 pocket-size pages), thinking that I would learn something about the holiday Juneteenth, trusting that the author, a nationally-recognized historian of African-American history, would be able to educate me about its cultural roots。 By the time I finished the book late that same night, I had in fact been educated about Juneteenth--but that was almost incidental to the real accomplishment of I picked up this tiny collection of essays (five essays with an introduction and a coda, spread out over 135 pocket-size pages), thinking that I would learn something about the holiday Juneteenth, trusting that the author, a nationally-recognized historian of African-American history, would be able to educate me about its cultural roots。 By the time I finished the book late that same night, I had in fact been educated about Juneteenth--but that was almost incidental to the real accomplishment of this collection, as the essay actually titled "On Juneteenth" is the last and the slightest contribution in the whole book, and most of what Gordon-Reed has to say about the holiday (aside from some eye-opening historical observations about its origin) revolved around her own family's celebration of it while growing up。 No, the real accomplishment of these essays--which really ought to be title "On Texas," or something like that--was to effectively, and succinctly, bring me into a world I'd never thought about before。 Annette Gordan-Reed was a Black girl growing up in Conroe, TX, in the 1960s; as the first African-American child to integrate the local White elementary school, she had a small amount of fame, which, from the perspective of decades of time and much academic learning later, could have been easily made into a foundation for some deep, critical, reflections on Texas culture and politics and history。 But instead, while the observations on Texas culture, politics, and history are absolutely present, they come through a re-created young person's perspective, or perhaps simply a perspective that Gordon-Reed, despite her age and education, has never entirely forgotten。 She was confused by the way her parents and other Black people responded--often negatively--to her breaking away from their prized, insulated Black world, and entering into an integrated White one。 She was fascinated by the fact that White people could be her friends one moment but the next minute would spout racist accusations or assumptions that she could see had no grounding in their or anyone's actual lived experience; rather, it was a received inheritance, perhaps structurally no different psychologically from her own。 Through it all, she was, and remains, a devout Texas partisan: apparently, a Black girl born in the 1950s can also love Six Flags Over Texas, and the movie Billy Jack, and buying trinkets at the Indian reservation near her hometown, and above all, the Alamo。 In these essays she artfully brings her youthful impressions of all of this and more into connection with some deep (and, to me, completely unknown) history--about Native American participation in the slave trade, about the French influence in East Texas, about the unique aspects of the Texas's involvement with the Confederacy and the Civil War and what came afterward, and so much more。 The result is a massive education--in ideological perspective as well as historical information--in a very short book。 The bit about Juneteenth is just the icing on the cake。I'll never be a Texan, but I know a few, and I'm going to recommend this book to all of them。 As an ethnographic study as well as a collection of delightful (and, in a few cases, racistly horrifying) memories, it's a great little accomplishment。 。。。more

Lisa Ladd

As a student of history, I am most appreciative of Gordon-Reed's personal and broader perspectives on the significance of Juneteenth。 Previously celebrated mainly in Texas, this holiday has become a much broader celebration and acknowledgment of the emancipation of black slaves and the long, still difficult road to achieving true equality。Set against her own upbringing in the Jim Crow world of Texas, her parents decision to send her to the all-whie school and all that entailed, and the questions As a student of history, I am most appreciative of Gordon-Reed's personal and broader perspectives on the significance of Juneteenth。 Previously celebrated mainly in Texas, this holiday has become a much broader celebration and acknowledgment of the emancipation of black slaves and the long, still difficult road to achieving true equality。Set against her own upbringing in the Jim Crow world of Texas, her parents decision to send her to the all-whie school and all that entailed, and the questions the author had about why the color of her skin should matter? Of particular note are the references to Indigenous tribes who came before, the infamous Alamo, Jim Bowie and other iconic figures that all made up the West in real life, but also the myths behind them。On Juneteenth is an accessible and thoroughly researched chapter of African American history, that should be assigned reading for all Americans。 。。。more

James (JD) Dittes

Annette Gordon-Reed is a preeminent historian who made her mark on American culture by untangling the knots that kept enslaved people hidden from the history books。 She is best known for her unveiling of the life of Sally Hemings and her insights into the life of Thomas Jefferson。I don't usually start a review with an author's bona fides, but I cite these because I read On Juneteenth because I have already read two of Gordon-Reed's books, and I really enjoyed this one。But On Juneteenth is not th Annette Gordon-Reed is a preeminent historian who made her mark on American culture by untangling the knots that kept enslaved people hidden from the history books。 She is best known for her unveiling of the life of Sally Hemings and her insights into the life of Thomas Jefferson。I don't usually start a review with an author's bona fides, but I cite these because I read On Juneteenth because I have already read two of Gordon-Reed's books, and I really enjoyed this one。But On Juneteenth is not the work of history that one might expect from Gordon-Reed。This book, is "on" the Texan origins of the Juneteenth celebration, which commemorates the anniversary of the reading of Order Number 3 on June 19, 1865, which informed the slaves in and around Galveston--and throughout the state--that they were now freed。 The Civil War had ended in Appomattox Court House two months earlier。 Abraham Lincoln was dead and buried。 The war--and the peculiar institution at its heart--was over。But the book is more personal than a straight history。 Gordon-Reed is a native Texan, born and raised in a small town in East Texas, and in this short, 140-page reflection on Juneteenth, she relates stories from her family's history, dating back to the days of slavery。 Among the highlights are her memories as the first black student at Hulon N。 Anderson Elementary in her hometown of Conroe in the mid-1960s。 As part of a community that preserved memories back to slave times, she recounts tales of lynching and cold-blooded murder which predated her bold stand, and she counters the official accounts of these men's deaths, writing, "For many years, Blacks like the ones in Conroe and Livingston--all over the country, really--have had their stories written out of history。" How rich, then, that Gordon-Reed has done so much through her scholarship to bring stories like hers and those of the Hemingses of Monticello so fully to life。While the reader may not find as much history as might be expected, Gordon-Reed's insights are relevant in our current era。 Juneteenth has broken out of Texas and gains more celebrants year after year, Blacks and other races celebrating across the country。 Reflecting on the history of the holiday, she writes, "Although there was a very long way to go before [Blacks] had full and equal citizenship, we were able to gather together as a family to celebrate [Juneteenth]。 Family members who were lost, were lost to death, in the way that all families lose people。 No one was being sold away。"On Juneteenth isn't the kind of doorstop-sized history one might expect from a scholar of Annette Gordon-Reed's stature。 It is subjective。 It is short。 It is a personal/family history of a celebration that is gaining steam in our culture。 It is well worth reading。Special thanks to NetGalley and Liveright Press for an advanced galley of the book in return for an honest review。 。。。more

Amanda

This is not the history book you're looking for。 But it is a very good meditation on race and the legacy of history, with a personal connection that makes it that much more immediate and tangible。 What does history mean today? What did it mean to people in the past? How do all these histories overlap, become mythologized or not, and live on in culture and personal experience? How does that change generationally? These are some of the questions that Annette Gordon-Reed's explorations examine。 Eve This is not the history book you're looking for。 But it is a very good meditation on race and the legacy of history, with a personal connection that makes it that much more immediate and tangible。 What does history mean today? What did it mean to people in the past? How do all these histories overlap, become mythologized or not, and live on in culture and personal experience? How does that change generationally? These are some of the questions that Annette Gordon-Reed's explorations examine。 Everyone will get something from this。 The work is approachable and doesn't require background knowledge, although having it adds layers。 If this is your jam, be ready to look things up if they dont sound familiar。 Your effort will be rewarded。 That said, American history graduate students need to read this。 Possibly high level undergraduates as well。 These questions and Gordon-Reed laying bare personal experience in order to interrogate the process of history and mythmaking is a rare glimpse into the thinking of one of the best in the business。Thank you to Annette Gordon-Reed, W。W。 Norton, and Netgalley for an advance ecopy in exchange for an honest opinion。 。。。more