'In Beyond the Rope: The Impact of Lynching on Black Culture and Memory, Karlos K. Hill powerfully contributes to the movement among historians to reconstruct counter narratives of lynchings told from the perspective of [a] variety of African American actors pursuing very different goals. Perhaps better than has been done before, Hill has historicized African American counter narratives of lynching, situating them within their sociohistorical context and drawing out their specific political objects.' Sundiata Keita Cha-Jua, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
'Taking to heart Stuart Hall's admonition that representation is a part of material reality and lived experience, this deeply thoughtful, richly documented, and theoretically sophisticated study breaks exciting new ground in the much-studied history of lynching. As importantly, it illuminates the ways in which agency and victimhood coexist in the African American past and in how black thinkers, performers, creative writers, activists, and family members have remembered and narrated the experience of terror.' David Roediger, Foundation Professor of American Studies and History, University of Kansas
'In Beyond the Rope, Karlos K. Hill mines diverse archival sources and deploys a multidisciplinary approach to reveal the complexity of African Americans' responses to lynching and mob violence. By simultaneously showing black people's victimization and strength, Hill illuminates artists' and activists' creation of a usable past of this violence, which was critical to black people's fight against it. This exciting and welcomed book is an important work ... that will [appeal] to scholars interested in African American history and studies.' Kidada E. Williams, Wayne State University, Michigan
'This slim volume investigates a view of lynching that is seldom found in the literature. ... The book is annotated and has a wide-ranging bibliography ... Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above.' T. F. Armstrong, Choice
'... a short but rich volume ... Hill has opened up some new avenues of exploration ... Beyond the Rope demands that we tell the story of lynching from a far broader perspective, for we cannot approach any semblance of truth otherwise.' Guy Lancaster, Arkansas Review: A Journal of Delta Studies
'Beyond the Rope itself serves as a much-need consoling narrative within the canon of lynching violence in the United States.' Tameka Bradley Hobbs, H-Law