Antiracism/Justice Archive

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Reconciled to Jargon

Posted on 04 April 2011 (2)

Several years ago, when I sat on the diversity committee of the National Writers Union, we asked anyone attending our caucus to introduce him or herself as either a “person of color,” an LGBT person, a person with a disability — or an ally of one or all of the above. I happily introduced myself […]

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The Warmth of Other Suns: Bk Review

Posted on 07 October 2010 (3)

Isabel Wilkerson’s The Warmth of Other Suns – The Epic Story of America’s Great Migration is a great narrative journalism saga, told through the stories of three African Americans — who were among the millions of Southern Blacks who went North (one in 30s, one in 40s, one in 50s) to escape white supremacist threats […]

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Eye Opening

Posted on 23 May 2010 (2)

 Liz Petry, author of “At Home Inside: A Daughter’s Tribute to Ann Petry”      http://www.upress.state.ms.us/books/1134 and “Can Anything Beat White? A Black Family’s  Letters” www.lizpetry.com  comments on her blog http://lizr128.wordpress.com/ Barbara Beckwith has done a brave and wonderful thing in writing What Was I Thinking?: Reflecting on Everyday Racism. I’ve long believed that no one in the United […]

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People of Color – quotes 1830-2010

Posted on 23 March 2010 (19)

People of Color have spoken out against white privilege and racism for two centuries. It’s time for white people to listen and to act In the white community, the path to a more perfect union means acknowledging that what ails the African-American community does not just exist in the minds of black people; that the […]

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Looking At Our Lives Through the Lens of Race Project

Posted on 23 March 2010 (1)

Join me in writing about your experiences growing up, with a focus on your awareness (or not) of race, racism, and white privilege.

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Howard Zinn – A Tribute

Posted on 07 February 2010 (68)

Howard Zinn − historian, activist, and a member of the National Writers Union and the Boston Chapter for almost 20 years  died on January 27, 2010. But his life and writing will inspire grassroots activists for many future generations.

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Howard Zinn, dead at 87

Posted on 28 January 2010 (0)

Howard Zinn died Wednesday, January 26, 2010. When I think about why Zinn is so important to me, I think of how he often describes his own experience, his own complicity, his own gradual understanding of “what’s going on” (eg as WWII Air Force bomber, bombing people he couldn’t see, including the first napalm drops […]

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Ah Hah Moments

Posted on 06 May 2009 (0)

Early one Winter morning, needing money for a trip out of town, I drove to the nearest bank outlet. I used my card to get into the ATM area, grabbed my cash and rushed out, then realized that I’d failed to retrieve my card.

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Four Reviews of Books About Racism in the U.S.

Posted on 06 April 2009 (3)

The Soiling of Old Glory: The Story of a Photograph That Shocked America, by Louis P. Masur (Bloomsbury Press, 2008) focuses on Boston Herald freelance photographer’s photos of a Black passerby, attorney Ted Landsmark, being attacked by anti-busing protesters,

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