This challenge was created by Dr. Eddie Moore, America & Moore, LLC. Image credit to Westminster Presbyterian Church.
...
Begin with LibGuide for Anti-Racism and Black Liberation - Heather Martin created this guide with contributions from Arianne Hartsell-Gundy, Dee McCullough, and Danette Pachtner.
Antiracist Baby by Ibram X. Kendi
...
Post-Traumatic Slave Syndrome by Joy DeGruy
Race for Profit - How Banks and the Real Estate Industry Undermined Black Homeownership By Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor
Decolonizing methodologies : research and indigenous peoples by Linda Tuhiwai Smith
BREAKING SCHOOLS' RULES: A Statewide Study of How School Discipline Relates to Students’ Success and Juvenile Justice Involvement - This report was prepared by the Council of State Governments Justice Center in partnership with the Public Policy Research Institute at Texas A&M University. The research and report were made possible with the generous support of the Atlantic Philanthropies and Open Society Foundations.
Articles
The 1619 Project - NYT project reexamining slavery timed for 400th anniversary of Africans arriving in Virginia
...
White Librarianship in Blackface: Diversity Initiatives in LIS by April Hathcock. Whiteness—an ideological practice that can extend beyond notions of racial supremacy to other areas of dominance—has permeated every aspect of librarianship, extending even to the initiatives we claim are committed to increasing diversity. This state of affairs, however, need not remain. This article examines the ways in which whiteness controls diversity initiatives in LIS, particularly in light of the application requirements set upon candidates.
Damage Limitation by Sara Ahmed, discusses how diversity often takes institutional form as damage limitation.
How White People Got Made, by Quinn Norton, exploring where the term “white people” comes from and which ethnic groups have and have not been able to become “white” through US history.
...
Algorithmic Bias and Fairness: Crash Course AI - discusses five common types of algorithmic bias
Stone Ghosts: A Journey Through The Confederate South, From Charlottesville To Selma - NBC News clip on Confederate Civil War monuments
...
Back to Natural - 75-minute documentary film that takes a look at the intersection of hair, politics, and identity in Black communities.
Exploring the Emotions of White Racism and Antiracism
...
The Ferguson Effect on Local Activism and Community Memory - digital activism
TED Talks to Help You Understand Racism in America
...
Slavery After Freedom - Vice clip with genealogist Antoinette Harrell
White Like Me: Race, Racism & White Privilege in America
The Great Migration and the power of a single decision | Isabel Wilkerson TedTalk
Everyday Inclusion Begins with Me: Diversity and Intergroup Communication in the Workplace - ACRL workshop
...
Why are Black & White Funerals STILL Separate? - Ask a Mortician with Caitlin Doughty
These Divers Search For Slave Shipwrecks and Discover Their Ancestors | National Geographic
...
- #BlackJoyProject - How the Black Joy Project is helping activists deal
- Beyonce's Lemonade
- Alvin Ailey Dance - Wade in the Water from Revelations
- Insecure by Issa Rae - Creator Issa Rae (The Misadventures of Awkward Black Girl) stars as Issa Dee, who struggles to navigate the tricky professional and personal terrain of Los Angeles along with her best friend Molly (Yvonne Orji).
- Year of Yes: How to Dance It Out, Stand In the Sun and Be Your Own Person by Shonda Rhimes
- Black Lightning - "Black Lightning focuses on the Black family dynamic, and many of the issues the pilot tackles are taken directly from current national headlines. Themes of racial profiling, school violence and gang conflict are all touched upon in the hour-long debut, though none of it seems forced or preachy. The topics all feel natural and crucial to the series' direction instead of deterring from the overall story. The episode illustrates how there can be two fundamentally different approaches to dealing with such complex issues, with neither one presented as inherently better or worsen than the other. For example, Jefferson and local gang member Lala each want the best for today's youth, yet they go about it in different ways. One uses a gentle hand, while the other chooses a firmer, more aggressive fist." - Tim Adams (review on CBR.com)
- Enjoy some work by local artists: Black on Black Project, Bobbie James, Durham Black Artists' Collective, Gemynii, Jade Wilson, Kennedi Carter, Wutang McDougal