EBOOK

American Bloodlines

Reckoning With Lynch Culture

Sonya Lea
(0)
Pages
200
Year
2025
Language
English

About

Summer 1936: Rainey Bethea, a young Black man, is tried for the rape and murder of an elderly white woman. The all-white, all-male jury takes just four and a half minutes to find him guilty. Bethea is hanged near the banks of the Ohio River in Owensboro, Kentucky, with more than twenty thousand white people in attendance. The crowd turns the violent spectacle of Bethea's hanging-the last documented public execution in the United States-into a brutal carnival.
Bethea's story came to author Sonya Lea through her family, and it is through her family that she reckons with its truths. At her grandmother's funeral, Lea received an oral history recorded by a neighbor. In its pages, Lea, who is descended from white Kentuckians on both sides, discovered that two of the spectators at Bethea's execution were her grandparents, teenage newlyweds Sherrel and Frances Ralph. Lea's research would also divulge that she was related to the prosecuting attorney for the Commonwealth, the man considered most responsible for Bethea's hanging.
American Bloodlines combines memoir with reportage and cultural criticism to interrogate and complicate the traditional narrative about how lynch culture is created in families, communities, and institutions. The essays in this collection grapple with our complicity in these atrocities-including the agreement in our silences-and demonstrate how we, as descendants, might take responsibility and bring new scrutiny to ancestral and communal crimes.

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Reviews

"American Bloodlines is about more than Lea's ancestors and the past. It is a deep exploration of lynching culture and an intentional examination of the role white womanhood still plays in upholding racist structures that endanger the lives of Black people and other people of color."
E. Gale Greenlee, former teacher-scholar in residence at the bell hooks center, Berea Col
"In this act of reckoning, this necessary labor, Sonya Lea faces violence directly-in all its bloody forms. Lea's admirable flow of research does not leave anyone she's affiliated with, whether by blood or heritage, to escape the attention of a fine-toothed anti-racist comb."
Davis Shoulders, editor of Queer Communion: Religion in Appalachia

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