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The Making of Appalachian Mississippi
“Mississippi’s white Appalachians may have owned the earth, but they could never own the past.”
by
Justin Randolph
via
Southern Cultures
on
May 14, 2021
Karate, Wonton, Chow Fun: The End of 'Chop Suey' Fonts
For years, the West has relied on so-called 'chop suey' fonts to communicate "Asianness" in food packaging, posters and ad campaigns.
by
Anne Quito
via
CNN
on
April 7, 2021
The Racist History of Celebrating the American Tomboy
Tomboys and the endless privileges accorded to white girls.
by
Lisa Fagin Davis
via
Literary Hub
on
August 11, 2020
The Messy Politics of Black Voices—and “Black Voice”—in American Animation
Cartoons have often been considered exempt from the country’s prejudices. In fact, they form a genre built on the marble and mud of racial signification.
by
Lauren Michele Jackson
via
The New Yorker
on
June 30, 2020
How Racist Was Flannery O’Connor?
She has become an icon of American letters. Now readers are reckoning with another side of her legacy.
by
Paul Elie
via
The New Yorker
on
June 15, 2020
My Native American Father Drew the Land O’Lakes Maiden. She Was Never a Stereotype.
The blind erasure of native culture is nothing new.
by
Robert DesJarlait
via
Washington Post
on
April 29, 2020
Literary Hoaxes and the Ethics of Authorship
What happens when we find out writers aren't who they said they were.
by
Louis Menand
via
The New Yorker
on
December 10, 2018
Thanksgiving: The National Day of Mourning
A Native student explains why the holiday is a painful reminder of a whitewashed past.
by
Allen Salway
via
Paper
on
November 21, 2018
David Porter Takes Us to School
The man who wrote "Soul Man" gives a master class on how code-switching through music helped catalyze the Civil Rights Movement.
by
Tonyaa Weathersbee
via
The Bitter Southerner
on
October 16, 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
A New Golden Age for the Tiki Bar
Half a century after the tropical craze of the 1960s, the modern age of escapism is taking cues from the past.
by
Kara Newman
via
The Atlantic
on
June 5, 2018
The Time Virginia Woolf Wore Blackface
Why did future members of the modernist literary movement darken their skin, speak fake Swahili, and board a British battleship?
by
Kevin Young
via
The New Yorker
on
October 27, 2017
Among the Tribe of the Wannabes
A closer look at non-Native Americans that appropriate, fabricate, and invent Native identities for themselves.
by
Russell Cobb
via
This Land Press
on
August 26, 2014
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