Glen Harris’s biography of Alexander McAllister Rivera Jr. provides an engaging exploration of the life and times of the famed photographer. In addition to providing a meticulously researched history of Rivera, Harris guides the reader on a journey that will compel a deeper engagement of the backstories behind many of his iconic photographs and African American life and culture in North Carolina. This work will be a much-welcomed addition to the libraries of scholars interested in how African Americans negotiated Jim Crow America and how Rivera illuminated and interpreted these times with his camera.
— Learotha Williams, Tennessee State University
This is an important study of the life of the 20th century journalist, photographer, and press officer, Alexander McAllister Rivera Jr.Glen Harris’s fine biography makes a critical contribution to the story of the Black press, the African American freedom struggle, and the history of Black colleges.
— Jerry Gershenhorn, author of Louis Austin and the Carolina Times: A Life in the Long Black Freedom Struggle
The history of the black press continues to be an ever more relevant area of study for what it reveals about the institution’s role in the civil rights movement. In Social Justice and Liberation Struggles, historian Glen Anthony Harris walks us through the life, career, and activism of Alexander M. Rivera, Jr., one of the country’s most formidable photojournalists in the twentieth century. Rivera’s namesake, as well as his journalistic and family roots, go back to the 1898 Wilmington Massacre, with linkages to Wilmington Daily Record newspaper editor Alexander Manly. This book stands as a true testament to the power and courage of the pen, typewriter, and photograph in documenting the daily injustices African Americans faced during the latter century. Through thoughtful and precise commentary and analysis, Harris offers a superbly written narrative complete with authoritative pacing and command of a worthy subject.
— Brandon K. Winford, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Harris’s biography adds to the growing scholarship of the African American press, Black journalists, and civil rights. In addition, Rivera’s series on the impact of Brown v. Board of Education provides primary source materials to students that document southern resistance to segregation.
— North Carolina Historical Review