Thirty-eight Witnesses: The Kitty Genovese Case

Front Cover
University of California Press, 1999 - Law - 78 pages
In a decade scarred by some of the worst tragedies in this country's history, March 13, 1964, stands apart from the other atrocities, not because of the identity of the victim--whose name was not Kennedy, King, or Malcolm--but because of the circumstances. Kitty Genovese was a 28-year-old middle-class woman from Kew Gardens, Queens, whose murder was distinguished by the presence of thirty-eight witnesses who did nothing to stop the series of attacks that would claim her life.

Thirty years later the Kitty Genovese murder still presses us to ask a litany of questions: Why did these people fail to act? What does it say about the conditions of contemporary urban life? Would it happen today? First published over thirty years ago, Thirty-Eight Witnesses remains a social document that warrants close and repeated examination. The account of the story, as related by one of the best-known and most controversial newspaper professionals in the country, has the added dimension of being part memoir, part investigative journalism, and part public service. In an updated preface that incorporates the most recent developments in the case, A.M. Rosenthal examines why the murder of Kitty Genovese still has the power to shock in a world jaded by news of urban violence.

About the author (1999)

A. M. Rosenthal is a columnist and former executive editor of the New York Times. In 1960 he won a Pulitzer Prize for his reporting from Poland. As assistant managing editor, associate managing editor, managing editor, and executive editor, Rosenthal was in charge of daily news operations at the Times for about sixteen years. The coauthor (with Arthur Gelb) of One More Victim, Rosenthal has also won several Overseas Press Club awards for his reporting from India, Pakistan, Nepal, Afghanistan, (the former) Ceylon, New Guinea, and Vietnam.

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