Posts Tagged ‘ LDF Picks ’

Bound to Cotton

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By Lee A. Daniels
In 1865, the North’s victory in the Civil War freed black Americans from slavery.

But it did not free them from cotton.



A Conversation with Jabari Asim

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By Eisa Nefertari Ulen
It is entirely fitting that Jabari Asim’s debut fiction, A Taste of Honey, is published in this, the year after Change. Everything is different now that the President of the United States is a black man. Everything changes in Asim’s collection of connected short stories, too—not because a leader is on the rise, but because one is shot down.



‘Our Need to Belong’: Elizabeth Nunez and Anna In-Between

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By Eisa Nefertari Ulen
Anna In-Between, the seventh book from acclaimed author Elizabeth Nunez, is one of the finest novels published this year. Nunez has made each word choice with the economy of a poet. The result is elegant prose: substantive, meaningful, but never wordy or clunky, just beautifully satisfying and thought-provoking.



Is That Your Child? Mothers Talk About Rearing Biracial Children

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By  Marion Kilson and Florence Ladd
Our new book, Is That Your Child?: Mothers Talk About Rearing Biracial Children, is based on interviews with black and white mothers of biracial children. The book opens with our interview with each other, charts the challenges and rewards of rearing biracial children, and profiles black and white mothers with distinctive biracial parenting experiences. It concludes with suggestions for positive parenting strategies, which are relevant to all varieties of biracial combinations.



“Your Spirit Walks Beside Us”

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“Your Spirit Walks Beside Us” The Politics of Black Religion Harvard University Press By Barbara Dianne Savage During the 2008 presidential campaign, the Black church was thrust into controversial discussions about race and politics.  Barbara Savage’s “Your Spirit Walks Beside Us” explores historical debates over Black religion and politics.  Even before the emergence of the [...]



“What Blood Won’t Tell”

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“What Blood Won’t Tell” A History of Race on Trial in America Harvard University Press By Ariela J. Gross Is race something we know when we see it? In 1857, Alexina Morrison, a slave in Louisiana, ran away from her master and surrendered herself to the parish jail for protection. Blue-eyed and blond, Morrison successfully [...]



“To Love the Wind and the Rain”

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“To Love the Wind and the Rain” African Americans and Environmental History University of Pittsburg Press Edited by Dianne D. Glave and Mark Stoll African- American perceptions of the environment have largely been ignored by scholars.  Dianne Glave and Mark Stoll have put together a book that begins to correct this vast oversight.  “To Love [...]