While much focus has been placed on Black Lives Matter activism in response to police and civilian murders of Black people, authors argue that Black activism in this era addresses a broad range of issues both on the street and inside institutions and communities.
While much focus has been placed on Black Lives Matter activism in response to police and civilian murders of Black people, authors argue that Black activism in this era addresses a broad range of issues both on the street and inside institutions and communities.
Mary Marcel is associate professor of information design and corporate communication at Bentley University. Edith Joachimpillai is principal managing partner at Copper and Cobalt, a global consulting firm based in the Boston area.
Inhaltsangabe
Table of Contents Acknowledgments Introduction: This Era of Black Activism (Edith Joachimpillai and Mary Marcel) Part 1: Black Activism 1. #BlackLivesMatter: Innovative Black Resistance (Jozie Nummi, Carly Jennings and Joe Feagin) 2. Dream Defenders: The First Ten Years and the Transition to This Era of Black Activism (Mary Marcel) 3. Protecting Whom? Serving What?: Police Accountability in Ferguson Protests in 2014 (Jozie Nummi and Amorette T. Young) 4. The Camera as "Moral Agent" and Testimonial for Black Reparative Justice (Joyce Hope Scott) 5. Community and Communal Coping: The Role of Social Media as a Resource for Black Activism and Black Refuge (David Stamps) 6. From Protests to Pride and Back Again: A Look at New York Pride's Origins and the Modern BIPOC Queer Movement to Reclaim It (Moussa Hassoun) 7. Challenging "Taken-for-Granted" Assumptions in Academia: Scholarship as Activism (Anne Rawls) 8. The Black Professor (Utz McKnight and Greg Austin) Part 2: The Effects of Black Activism
Table of Contents Acknowledgments Introduction: This Era of Black Activism (Edith Joachimpillai and Mary Marcel) Part 1: Black Activism 1. #BlackLivesMatter: Innovative Black Resistance (Jozie Nummi, Carly Jennings and Joe Feagin) 2. Dream Defenders: The First Ten Years and the Transition to This Era of Black Activism (Mary Marcel) 3. Protecting Whom? Serving What?: Police Accountability in Ferguson Protests in 2014 (Jozie Nummi and Amorette T. Young) 4. The Camera as "Moral Agent" and Testimonial for Black Reparative Justice (Joyce Hope Scott) 5. Community and Communal Coping: The Role of Social Media as a Resource for Black Activism and Black Refuge (David Stamps) 6. From Protests to Pride and Back Again: A Look at New York Pride's Origins and the Modern BIPOC Queer Movement to Reclaim It (Moussa Hassoun) 7. Challenging "Taken-for-Granted" Assumptions in Academia: Scholarship as Activism (Anne Rawls) 8. The Black Professor (Utz McKnight and Greg Austin) Part 2: The Effects of Black Activism
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