Gloria:
In the Shadow of White Supremacy
Translated by Deborah Bragan-Turner
Overview
This powerful collaboration between Gloria Ray Karlmark and Elisabeth Åsbrink tells Gloria's story as one of the Little Rock Nine for the first time.
In 1957, armed white soldiers prevented fourteen-year-old Gloria Ray Karlmark from entering Little Rock Central High School in Arkansas. The governor refused to allow her and eight other Black teenagers into the all-white school. 'That day my childhood ended,' Gloria says today.
The Little Rock Nine, as they came to be known, were the first to act on the 1954 Supreme Court decision ruling school segregation as unconstitutional. Arkansas' violent resistance forced President Eisenhower to deploy federal troops to escort the nine Black children to school each day.
The incident became world news and a Cold War flashpoint, exposing American racism to the world, and the Little Rock Nine are now civil rights icons. But the price they paid was devastating. They endured harassment, death threats, and violence. Their families and supporters suffered. The governor ultimately closed all public schools rather than allow integration, affecting thousands of students.
Gloria tells the story of that transformative year, and the deep roots of American racism and slavery from which it grew. Åsbrink's eloquent narration and distinctive voice illuminate key moments of conflict and inequality by masterfully weaving together personal and national history.
Details
- Format
- Size
- Extent
- ISBN
- RRP
- Pub date
- Rights held
- Other rights
- Paperback
- 5.3in x 8.5in
- 240 pages
- 9781964992341
- USD$20.00
- 5 January 2027
- World English
- Nordin Agency
About the Authors
Elisabeth Åsbrink is a journalist and author. Her parents were Hungarian and English, and she was born and raised in, and now lives in, Sweden. Her book And in the Vienna Woods the Trees Remain received worldwide attention for revealing new information about IKEA founder Ingvar Kamprad’s ties to Nazism. It won several awards, including the August Prize for Best Swedish Non-Fiction Book of the Year (2011). Her most recent book, 1947, won the prestigious Letterstedt Prize, was translated into 19 languages, and published in the USA in 2018 by Other Press.