Elegy for Mary Turner

March 19, 2021
book cover
Rachel Marie-Crane Williams
ISBN: 
9781788739047

From the Verso website:

A lyrical and haunting depiction of American racial violence and lynching, evoked through stunning full-color artwork

In late May 1918 in Valdosta, Georgia, ten Black men and one Black woman—Mary Turner, eight months pregnant at the time—were lynched and tortured by mobs of white citizens.

Through hauntingly detailed full-color artwork and collage, Elegy for Mary Turner names those who were killed, identifies the killers, and evokes a landscape in which the NAACP investigated the crimes when the state would not and a time when white citizens baked pies and flocked to see Black corpses while Black people fought to make their lives—and their mourning—matter.

Included are contributions from C. Tyrone Forehand, great-grandnephew of Mary and Hayes Turner, whose family has long campaigned for the deaths to be remembered; abolitionist activist and educator Mariame Kaba, reflecting on the violence visited on Black women’s bodies; and historian Julie Buckner Armstrong, who opens a window onto the broader scale of lynching’s terror in American history.

All royalties from this book go to the National Center for Civil and Human Rights in Atlanta, GA.


About Rachel Marie-Crane Williams

Associate Professor Rachel Williams is chair of the University of Iowa Department of Gender, Women's, and Sexuality Studies, with a secondary appointment in the Intermedia Studies section of the School of Art and Art History. Her work as a researcher and creative scholar focuses on women's issues, community, art, and people who are incarcerated. American alternative/single creator comics and graphic novels have been at the heart of her creative scholarship for the past few years, while her traditional scholarship has been focuses on women in prison. She teaches courses about comics and sequential art, women's studies, intermedia, prison, feminist research methods, and civic engagement.

Explore Professor Williams's work.