Trouble by Leon F. Litwack Leon F. Litwack is the author of Trouble in Mind. Litwack is an American historian and historian professor at the University of California, Berkeley. He was born in Santa Barbara, California in 1929. In 1951, Litwack got a bachelor's degree and continued his research. In 1958 he received his Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley. The book by Samuel Eliot Morison and Henry Steele Commager stimulated curiosity in the history of Litwack.
This book was published by author Leon F. Litwack in 1961. He began teaching in 1964 after acquiring a bachelor's degree. He got a doctorate in 1951. Professor of the history of A. F. and May T. Morrison of the University of California at Berkeley, he was former chairman of OAH. The north of slavery is his first major publication. He later wrote "Storm is so long: The influence of slavery" (1980). This book is the winner of the Pulitzer Prize and the Francis Parkman Prize. His latest work is "Troubles in mind: Southern black people in the Jim Crow era" (1998)
In order to introduce Arendt's so-called "evil mediocrity" or the average of evil actors, I will describe Leon F. Litwack's article on black torture and murder in the southern United States entitled Hellhounds 1. Litwack said that he pledged to find the responsible person, issued arrest warrants to them, pledge to be punished in the court, "he said, killing Maritner (14). Immediate mob reactivity and behavior leads to careful consideration of the evil ability of ordinary people. "After binding the ankles, they hang her down from the tree and face downwards, drying the clothes with gasoline and burning them from her ..." (14). This article is continuing to violently pull out the baby from the abdomen with a knife. After crying at the feet of the mother, the baby was murdered.
Leon Litwack, a professor of history at the University of California at Berkeley, is studying slavery in his new book. He saw slavery at the moment of his death; all other studies were tested with their height. At the end of slavery the meaning and characteristics of the system became the most clear. In addition, this slavery moment is definitely the most dramatic episode in American history. In a few months, about 4 million people born slavery entered freely and began to seek equality.