The Red Record

E287442

The Red Record is Ida B. Wells’s groundbreaking 1895 pamphlet that systematically documents and analyzes lynching in the United States to expose its racial and political motives.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
The Red Record canonical 2

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (48)

Predicate Object
instanceOf historical document
nonfiction work
pamphlet
aimsTo challenge narratives of Black criminality
expose false justifications for lynching
mobilize opposition to lynching
analyzes causes of lynching
political motives of lynching
racial motives of lynching
associatedWithMovement American civil rights movement
surface form: African American civil rights movement

anti-lynching movement
author Ida B. Wells
circulationType mass-distributed reform literature
countryOfPublication United States of America
surface form: United States
critiques U.S. legal system’s failure to prosecute lynchers
complicity of local authorities in lynching
sensationalist press coverage of alleged Black crimes
documents lynching cases
statistics on lynching
field African American history
U.S. social history
race relations in the United States
focusesOnPeriod late 19th century United States
post-Reconstruction era
form pamphlet-length publication
genre anti-lynching literature
political pamphlet
hasPerspective African American woman activist
historicalContext Jim Crow laws
surface form: Jim Crow era
influenced later civil rights activism
subsequent anti-lynching campaigns
intendedAudience American public
reformers and policymakers
language English
mainSubject African American civil rights
lynching in the United States
racial violence
white supremacy
notableFor being one of the first comprehensive studies of lynching
challenging the myth that lynching punished rape
linking lynching to economic and political control
publicationYear 1895
publisherType reform press
relatedWorkByAuthor Southern Horrors: Lynch Law in All Its Phases
usesMethod statistical analysis
systematic data collection
usesSource newspaper reports
public records

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (2)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Ida B. Wells notableWork The Red Record
Ida notableWork The Red Record
subject surface form: Ida B. Wells