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978-1-878086-93-8
1-878086-93-6
$24.95 hardcover
6" x 9"
275 pages
black-and-white photographs
Down Home Press
Other
books by Jerry Bledsoe:
Blue Horizons
Country Cured
From Whalebone to Hot House
The World's Number One, Flat-Out, All-Time Great Stock Car Racing Book
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When
Rhonda Winters, director of the Archdale campus of Randolph Community
College, decided to offer an adult, community outreach course on the
Civil War in North Carolina, she couldn't have imagined the storm of
political correctness she was setting into motion and the nightmare it
would bring.
The
course was almost finished, and the students were enjoying it immensely,
when a controversy-seeking reporter for the News & Record of
Greensboro, who had entered the class without permission, clashed with
instructors and students and wrote an article falsely claiming that the
course was teaching that slaves in the South were happy.
Picked
up by the Associated Press and reprinted worldwide, the article brought
a barrage of vituperative news coverage and vilification to the college.
Although students, instructors and college officials protested that the
newspaper's sensational claims never happened, News & Record
editors insisted that its articles were fair and accurate--even after
evidence indicated otherwise.
The
articles resulted in branding the college, students and instructors as
racist, and brought about an investigation by the U.S. Commission on
Civil Rights and the cancellation of the course.
In
this engrossing, moving, and frightening account, national award-winning
journalist and New York Times
#1 bestselling author Jerry Bledsoe takes readers into the class to show
what actually happened and behind the scenes as college officials,
students, and instructors attempted to deal with the crisis. But more
than that, it tells the story of an honorable man, Jack Perdue, the
course instructor, a local historian and preservationist, who died
during the controversy. A man whom family, friends and students believe
was destroyed by the news media.
Death
by Journalism? raises important questions about free speech,
academic freedom, political correctness, racial politics, and integrity
of the news media. It should be required reading for journalism
students.
To
read an interview with Jerry Bledsoe about Death by Journalism?,
please click here.
about
the author
Jerry Bledsoe, who lives in Randolph County, N.C., where the controversy
took place, is the author of the bestselling true-crime books Bitter
Blood, Blood Games, Before He Wakes and Death
Sentence, as well as the bestselling fictional memoir, The Angel Doll, and its
sequel, A Gift of Angels.
He has been a contributing editor of Esquire
and a reporter and columnist for the Greensboro News
& Record, the Charlotte
Observer and the Louisville
Times. He won two Ernie Pyle Memorial Awards and two National
Headliner Awards for his reporting, as well as numerous N.C. Press
Association Awards. Two of his books were finalists for the Edgar Allen
Poe Award.
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