3 minute read

Books to radicalise

In They Can’t Kill Us All, award-winning journalist Wesley Lowery presents his fndings after a year investigating the reality of police brutality and racism within the USA. This book delivers an honest, eye-opening account of the front-line through interviews with the families of victims of police brutality, as well as the activists who are demanding change. Lowery effortlessly presents not just statistics, but the human stories that exist behind them. By doing so, They Can’t Kill Us All provides a well-reported, captivating account of the beginning of the Black Lives Matter Movement and the fght against racial injustice. Even though this book is three years old, it could not be more relevant today. 100 Great Black Britons is a brilliant entry-level book if you fnd yourself, like many, lacking in knowledge of Black British History. Patrick Vernon OBE started the ‘100 Great Black Britons’ Campaign in 2004 as a response to a lack of representation and diversity on the BBC’s ‘100 Greatest Britons’ list. Vernon’s campaign collated nominations by the public of the Black Briton they admired the most, in order ‘to honour the remarkable achievements of key Black British individuals over history’. This endeavour was incredibly successful and Vernon, with Osbourne, decided to commemorate the ‘100 Great Black Britons’ Campaign into a book. The chapters are easy to read, engaging and include amazing Black Britons that range from actors, to abolitionists, to LGBTQI+ activists. If you wish to learn more about some truly inspiring Black Britons, please pick up this book. When They Call You A Terrorist: A Black Livers Matter Memoir is a crucial text to read during the current political climate, but also incredibly heart-breaking to read. The book discusses powerful topics such as police brutality, racial profling and jail abolitionism with remarkable insight and clarity. However, it is the addition of Khan-Cullors’ personal memoirs of childhood and how she became one of the founders of the #BlackLivesMatter, and the susequent Black Lives Matter Movement, that really make this an inspirational text. Written with award-winning author and journalist asha bandele, this book creates a reading experience that will make you laugh, cry and ultimately, emerge with a new-found understanding of why the fght against racial injustice is so important. Carruthers, a truly inspirational and infuential activist, not only masterfully puts forward a call-to-arms that is insightful and accessible, but also provides real stories of social movement work that represent the change for which she advocates. Drawing on historical movements such as the Haitian Revolution and the US Civil Rights Movement, Carruthers delivers a powerful manifesto that provides a roadmap to organising and activism that is thorough, powerful and thought-provoking. Unapologetic not only explores these themes, and demands that we take action to eliminate racial injustice, but also critiques the violence and history that it stems from. This text is vital, well-researched and a truly powerful analysis of why Black movements are crucial for us all to understand and support.

Multi award-winning author and professor, Ibram X. Kendi, has written a book that is absolutely vital reading for today. How To Be An Antiracist argues that racism does not stem from ignorance, but rather, is propelled by proftability and utility within society. Kendi’s work is truly eye-opening, and asks us to honestly refect on how we are all complicit, to some degree, and how we should all self-evaluate our own actions. Not only this, Kendi also manages to balance provocative revolutionary ideas with a sense of hope for humanity’s ability to grow, change and accept. Essentially, Kendi provides a transformative handbook on how to recognise, refect and change our understanding of racism in a way that

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is accessible, and pivotal, to everyone.

Bernadine Evaristo’s Girl, Woman, Other is a polyphonic novel made up of interconnected stories narrated through

Evaristo’s original style which blends together both poetry and prose. The Booker Prize winning novel tells the tales of 12 characters, most of whom are Black British women, whose lives and stories overlap, interlink and connect despite their contrasting and distinct backgrounds and experiences. Evaristo creates a rich eclectic collection of perspectives from engaging, complex and fawed characters through tales of their families, friends and lovers. Girl, Woman, Other is a vignette of the lives of Black British women and the stories that make up their modern-day experience, exploring a wide range of relevant issues, questioning feminism, race and privilege throughout, ultimately displaying a huge sense of interconnectivity through the characters as well as the reader.