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Millennials Ruin Everything
In true millennial form, I’m proud to kill off one of America’s beloved past-times: racism. Of course, there have always been writers working to dismantle racism (the prolific books of James Baldwin and Angela Davis come to mind). But millennial writers are speaking up and demanding attention. To help you join the revolution, here is a list of new (or newish) books written to help you rise up and fight for black liberation everywhere.
This how-to guide helps explain the issues of race and discrimination to a white American audience. From Black Lives Matter to the N-word, Oluo uses her own experiences to give a white people a way to understand race. She also includes steps to move forward, with ways to take action and make positive change.
What started as a blog post in 2014 culminated in a well-researched book about the political issues around race in Britain. Since then, she has traveled the world talking and engaging with people on the topic of race and improved policies. It’s will surprise you how different (or not so different) European racism can be.
Smith is watching the world unfold as a twenty-something black man. He uses his own coming-of-age story to talk about manhood and what it means to be a black millennial. He also rips into the effects of toxic masculinity and lack of mental health care in the black community.
A Black Lives Matter co-founder, Cullors speaks to her childhood and life growing up in Los Angeles. She traces her activist history to events in her past and speaks to the fear of living day-to-day as a black woman. What she never expected was her outrage for one court case to start an entire movement.
Placing her focus on black women, Cooper wants to erase the negative images of black women as angry women. She uses her personal history as the foundation of her feminist theories—everything from why she includes white women to why Beyonce is a feminist icon.
Jerkins uses her personal story as the model of how racism touches everything you do and can be as a black woman. She talks about subjects from hair politics to grade school bullies, giving an honest look at what it cost to be a black woman growing up in America.
When her YouTube video went viral, Ramsey saw that chance to use her voice for change. Her book is a collection of essays that chronicle her work in TV and social media. She also gives some advice on how to manage an online/offline life when those lines can become blurred.
Happy reading!