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We Speak for Ourselves
How Woke Culture Prohibits Progress
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی
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March 4, 2019
In this thoughtful and humorous take on race in America, Watkins (The Beast Side), an essayist and professor, argues that experts who have “strangely no connection to the black people they claim they are fighting for” often overshadow those of “people from the street.” The book includes Watkins’s recollections of growing up in eastern Baltimore (playing basketball with friends, nightly gunfire, murdered peers, selling drugs, and hustling for money) and of his professional rise, kick-started by a 2014 essay in Salon about class-based limitations on access to information. Speaking more systemically, Watkins outlines the hurdles facing black Americans—underfunded schools, racist police, corrupt housing practices, high interest rates from banks—with facts, figures where relevant, and examples from news stories. He decries performatively “woke” activists who may participate in a protest or show up for a photo, but don’t do what would really help: staying in a community, getting to know its residents, and contributing by, for example, teaching marketable skills or serving as role models. Watkins’s appealingly conversational prose and insight about current events keep the pages turning. This excellent exploration will appeal to anyone interested in race in America.
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March 1, 2019
Watkins (The Cook Up: A Crack Rock Memoir, 2016, etc.) anchors his new collection of essays in the voices, language, everyday realities, and dreams of black citizens of his home East Baltimore neighborhood."In the midst of all the black narratives stacked on bookshelves, we have a problem--a major problem," writes the author. "People from the street are absent from them." As an emergent writer with a background in the streets, he found himself a piece of "celebrity" after landing a viral essay with Salon. The author continues to offer deep critiques of the elitism and respectability that directly and indirectly censor voices of the multitudes of black experience, and he explores what it means to be accountable to his people in his writings. While these communities are overtly susceptible to the imposed hurdles of systemic racism, their experiences and worldviews don't easily conform to the #StayWoke packaging of mainstream black-led protest movements. As such, Watkins stresses the importance of letting more people speak for themselves and combining voice with action on a wide variety of institutional and structural forces that impede black progress. He touches on topics such as education, policing, food deserts, poor housing, drug markets, structural poverty, and more. "The days of one black savior are over," he writes. "Most of the people who identify as black leaders in the mainstream are too famous to directly interact with the people who need them the most. I learned to rethink what a leader is, what a mentor is, and how to be a valuable ally." Ultimately, being driven by "a whole lot of love" has allowed him to realize that the greatest rewards lie within the work. As he writes, he is "blessed in being able to try" as he continues to bring East Baltimore to the world.A strong offering that brings nuance and multiplicity to readers attempting to decipher the black male urban experience while uplifting the stories, visions, and love that incubated a rising star.
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