A popular magazine written in a popular style, Emerge
was radical in its treatment of the black condition as the human condition.
Naturally, famous writers appear, including Dick Gregory, Walter Mosley,
Clarence Thomas and Maxine Waters. So, too, do newsworthy major events,
lest readers forget the loss of Emmet Till (lynching) or Ron Brown (airplane
crash). Besides terrific writing and coverage of important news, though,
Emerge had unusual breadth. It dipped into biblical scholarship, environmental
issues, for-profit prisons, the Internet, the brokering of businesses
and medical research. It taunted double standards: the targeting of
black congressmen, genocide in Rwanda. Its coverage stretched around
the world, to Kosovo, Brazil, Cuba and Japan. It kept an eye close to
home, too, taking in radio talk-show hosts, Miss Apollo and churchwomen.
Emerge knew how to laugh at strategies for getting away from long awards
dinners. Although Emerge was devoted unequivocally to African-Americans,
Curry's vision and editorship of this book will instruct, provoke and
sometimes entertain or inspire any reader.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Book Description
The 1990s. African Americans achieved more influence–and
faced more explosive issues–than ever before. One word captured
those times. One magazine expressed them. Emerge.
In those ten years, with an impressive circulation
of 170,000 and more than forty national awards to its credit, Emerge
became a serious part of the American mainstream. Time hailed its “uncompromising
voice.” The Washington Post declared that Emerge “gets better
with each issue.” Then, after nearly a decade, Emerge magazine
closed its doors. Now, for the first time, here’s a collection
of the finest articles from a publication that changed the face of African
American news.
From the Clarence Thomas nomination to the Bill Clinton
impeachment . . . from the life of Louis Farrakhan to the death of Betty
Shabazz . . . from reparations for slavery to the rise of blacks on
Wall Street . . . the most important people, topics, and turning points
of this remarkable period are featured in incisive articles by first-rate
writers.
Emerge may have ended with the millennium, but–as
this incomparable volume proves–the quality of its coverage is
still unequaled, the extent of its impact still emerging. Stirring tribute,
uncanny time capsule, riveting read–The Best of Emerge Magazine
is also the best of American journalism.
Buy
Best of Emerge today!