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Viewing 61–84 of 84 results.
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The Wages of Whiteness
One idea inherited from 1960s radicalism is that of “white privilege,” a protean concept invoked to explain wealth, political power, and even cognition.
by
Hari Kunzru
via
New York Review of Books
on
September 3, 2020
Songs in the Key of Life
A new book presents an expansive vision of soul music.
by
Danielle Amir Jackson
via
Bookforum
on
September 3, 2020
The Day Malcolm X Was Killed
At the height of his powers, the Black Nationalist leader was assassinated, and the government botched the investigation of his murder.
by
Les Payne
via
The New Yorker
on
August 27, 2020
Why the Black National Anthem Is Lifting Every Voice to Sing
Scholars agree the song, endowed with its deep history of Black pride, speaks to the universal human condition.
by
Janelle Harris Dixon
via
Smithsonian
on
August 10, 2020
Why Bill Clinton Attacked Stokely Carmichael
Clinton disparaged Carmichael at John Lewis’s funeral. But Black radicalism speaks more to the present moment than Clinton’s centrist politics.
by
Amandla Thomas-Johnson
via
Jacobin
on
August 6, 2020
partner
A Long-Forgotten Holiday Animates Black Lives Matter
The movement for racial equality echoes the vision of the “August First Day” holiday.
by
Tom Zoellner
via
Made By History
on
July 31, 2020
Sun Ra: ‘I’m Everything and Nothing’
Sun Ra, a seminal artist of afrofuturism, embraced a unique vision of blackness.
by
Namwali Serpell
via
New York Review of Books
on
July 12, 2020
The Myth of the “Sixties”
When we mythologize the ’60s, we lose sight of what’s truly ahead of us.
by
Gregory Baszak
via
Public Books
on
April 1, 2020
The Tortured Logic of #ADOS
The American Descendants of Slavery movement combines a left-wing critique of America’s founding with a distinctly right-wing strain of xenophobia.
by
Hubert Adjei-Kontoh
via
The Outline
on
November 21, 2019
Reflections on Malcom X
What we can learn from him and his legacy.
by
Nathan J. Robinson
,
Oren Nimni
via
Current Affairs
on
August 28, 2019
partner
Paying for the Past: Reparations and American History
Reparations for African-Americans has been a hot topic on the presidential campaign trail, but the debate goes back centuries.
via
BackStory
on
May 24, 2019
partner
The Centuries-Long Fight for Reparations
And how black activists won the support of Democratic candidates.
by
Ana Lucia Araujo
via
Made By History
on
April 28, 2019
“There Is a Scottsboro in Every Country”
A review of two new books that illuminate a range of still unrealized visions of anti-imperialism, anti-capitalism, and anti-racism.
by
Amanda Reid
via
Public Books
on
April 11, 2019
Cataloging Black Knowledge
How Dorothy Porter assembled and organized a premier Africana research collection.
by
Zita Cristina Nunes
via
Perspectives on History
on
November 20, 2018
The Trouble With Uplift
A curiously inflexible brand of race-first neoliberalism has taken root in American political discourse.
by
Adolph Reed Jr.
via
The Baffler
on
September 4, 2018
The Afro-Pessimist Temptation
An examination of the tragic echoes of Reconstruction-era politics following Obama's presidency.
by
Darryl Pinckney
via
New York Review of Books
on
May 23, 2018
Frederick Douglass Is No Libertarian
It’s the 200th anniversary of Frederick Douglass’s birth, and some on the right have been crashing the party.
by
Maurice S. Lee
via
Public Books
on
May 18, 2018
The FBI's War on Black-Owned Bookstores
At the height of the Black Power movement, the Bureau focused on the unlikeliest of public enemies: black independent booksellers.
by
Joshua Clark Davis
via
The Atlantic
on
February 19, 2018
How to Fight White Backlash
What three seminal books from 1967 can teach us about fighting racism in the Trump era.
by
Robert Greene II
via
Dissent
on
November 10, 2017
The Devastation of Black Wall Street
Racial violence destroyed an affluent African-American community, seen as a threat to white-dominated American capitalism.
by
Kimberly Fain
via
JSTOR Daily
on
July 5, 2017
Identity Crisis
It’s only by acknowledging the roots of identity politics in the emancipatory movements of the past that we can begin the work of formulating an alternative.
by
Salar Mohandesi
via
Viewpoint Magazine
on
March 17, 2017
Words Are the Weapons, the Weapons Must Go
A new book recovers long-suppressed alternative politics.
by
Patrick Iber
via
Los Angeles Review of Books
on
April 28, 2016
Who Was W.E.B. Du Bois?
A review of "Lines of Descent: W.E.B. Du Bois and the Emergence of Identity," by Kwame Anthony Appiah.
by
Nicholas Lemann
via
New York Review of Books
on
September 24, 2014
‘I Can’t Accept Western Values Because They Don’t Accept Me’
Revolution, the civil rights movement, and African-American identity.
by
James Baldwin
,
Robert Penn Warren
via
Literary Hub
on
April 27, 1964
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