Richard Leeman's To Reach the Nation's Ear: A History of African American Public Speaking is the book we have needed and have been waiting for in the field of public address. Drawing from his years of experience in studying African American rhetoric and public address, Leeman takes the reader from Colonial Times to the present to offer us a must-have introductory text that highlights some of the exemplars within the African American rhetorical tradition.
— Andre E. Johnson, author of The Forgotten Prophet: Bishop Henry McNeal Turner and the African American Prophetic Tradition and No Future in This Country: The Prophetic Pessimism of Bishop Henry McNeal Turner
To Reach the Nation’s Ear: A History of African American Public Speaking illustrates the power and impact when Black orators brandish the nation’s egalitarian principles with eloquence and fire, and also helps us understand the rich and complex history of African American oratory. Scholars and students will find this book illuminating and useful in contexts where teaching and learning about Black history and rhetoric occur.
— Cynthia King, professor of Communication Studies, Furman University
This is an extraordinarily valuable and timely book. Conversations about racial justice in the United States are most productive when they are informed by the rich history of African American public address, and this book offers a survey that is both sweeping and detailed. The elegant analyses emphasize the relevance of each individual text and the themes and arguments that cross eras and ideologies, preserving both the diversity and the cohesion that characterize African American oratorical traditions. Written in a clear and accessible style, and brimming with insights, this book is important for everyone interested in exploring, or more deeply appreciating, this essential history of compelling eloquence.
— Robert E. Terrill, Indiana University
Leeman creates a masterful symphony of African-American rhetoric from colonial days to the present, incorporating both well-known voices and less familiar vocalists into an expansive rhetorical history punctuated by extended examples. Covering an impressive range of topics, this opus addresses not only the rhetorical evolutions of abolition to civil rights to Black Lives Matter, but also such topics as education, temperance, migration, woman suffrage, wars, and economics. By highlighting the creative, articulate, powerful Black voices holding a prominent place in American history, Leeman offers an accessible, well-researched volume constituting a valuable addition to the literature.
— Kathleen J. Turner, professor emerita and founding chair, department of Communication Studies, Davidson College