The Eleanor Roosevelt Papers: The Human Rights Years,
1945-1948
|
Edited by Allida Black Foreword by Hillary Rodham
Clinton |
| 1,200 pages, 7 x 10 |
| 60 b&w illustrations |
| Cloth ISBN 0-8139-2924-8 $99.50 |
| October 2009 |
 |
“Eleanor Roosevelt once asked, ‘Where do human
rights begin? In small places, close to home, so close and so
small that they cannot be seen on any maps of the world. Such
are the places where every man, woman, and child seeks equal justice,
equal opportunity, equal dignity without discrimination.’
As the Chair of the United Nations commission drafting the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, Eleanor Roosevelt worked tirelessly
from 1946 to 1948. . . . Through Volume 1 of the Eleanor Roosevelt
Papers, we honor her work, her legacy, her timeless values and
ideals, and her commitment to imagining a better future for all
people. As you read through this volume, I hope her words will
be a call to action.”—from the foreword by Hillary
Rodham Clinton
Eleanor Roosevelt walked out of the White House more than the
president's widow. As a nationally syndicated columnist, popular
lecturer, author, party leader, and social activist, Roosevelt
assured her friends that “my voice will not be silent.” Vowing
not to be a “workless worker in a world of work,” Roosevelt dedicated
her unstinting energy to “winning the peace.”
The 410 documents in The Eleanor Roosevelt Papers, Volume
1: The Human Rights Years, 1945-1948, collected from 263 archives
in 50 states and 9 nations, chronicle not only Roosevelt's impact
on American politics and the United Nations, but also the serious
treatment she received from those in power. They disclose the
inner workings of Truman's first administration, the United Nations,
and the major social and political movements of the postwar world.
They also reveal the intense struggles Roosevelt's correspondents
and advisors had confronting a war-scarred world, the conflicting
advice they gave her, and the material Roosevelt reviewed and
the people she consulted while determining her own course of action.
Using a wide variety of material—letters, speeches, columns,
debates, committee transcripts, telegrams, and diary entries—this
first of five volumes presents a representative selection of the
actions Eleanor Roosevelt took to define, implement, and promote
human rights and the impact her work had at home and abroad. Readers
may disagree over various decisions she made, language that she
used, or the priorities she established. Yet her influence is
unquestioned.
Allida Black, Research Professor of History
and International Affairs at The George Washington University, is
a member of the Board of Directors of the Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt
Institute, the Eleanor Roosevelt Legacy Committee, the Center for
New Deal Studies, and the National Coalition for History. Her publications
include Casting Her Own Shadow: Eleanor Roosevelt and the Shaping
of Postwar Liberalism, What I Hope to Leave Behind: The Essential
Essays of Eleanor Roosevelt,
and Courage in a Dangerous
World: The Political Writings of Eleanor Roosevelt.