‘The Star-Spangled Banner’s’ racist lyrics reflect its slave owner author, Francis Scott Key. Francis Scott Key and
Colin Kaepernick are perfect opposites in a drama of privilege versus protest in America. Key, an elite insider and author of the national anthem, helped a president down a dark path to defend slavery. Kaepernick, the outsider, is the former NFL quarterback banished from the realm for kneeling during the lofty victory song that Key wrote under a battle-stained sky in 1814.
Read more
The Serena Williams cartoon, the Dallas shooting and the weapon of white femininity. Whatever you think of the merits of Williams’ on-court exchange with the umpire, the cartoon is part of a long line of caricatures reducing black bodies to grotesquerie to make a point about their unworthiness and threat. Especially their threat to white women, a sentiment that has long acted as the emotional fuel and structuring fiction of white supremacy and violence. Read more
NAACP Legal Defense Fund lays out Kavanaugh’s “extensive and troubling record” on civil rights. If Kavanaugh is confirmed, the LDF report concludes, “his jurisprudence will solidify the civil rights retrenchment with devastating consequences for the constitutional and legal protections of those who are most marginalized in our society for decades to come. We must oppose his confirmation to the Supreme Court of the United States.” Read more
Does Teacher Diversity Matter in Student Learning? Research shows that students, especially boys, benefit when teachers share their race or gender. Yet most teachers are white women. Read more
African-Americans and home schooling: ‘A way of freedom.’ More African-American families, particularly in the South, are home schooling because of the lack of black history in public school curriculums as well as the disproportionate disciplining of black students. Watch here
Can You Win an Election by Talking About Segregation? Chicago’s population is divided almost equally among African-Americans, Latinos and whites, and the geographic Balkanization allows segregation to infect neighborhoods with the graveness of a waterborne disease. Too many politicians, black and white, do not address the realities of segregation head on. It is as if speaking directly about this reality — vacant lots, boarded-up buildings and paltry economic investment in majority-black neighborhoods — will turn voters off or make even more real the reality that Chicagoans live every day. Read more
Quincy Jones Has Accomplished So Much That Even Netflix’s New Doc About Him Can’t Capture It All. At 85 years old, Quincy Jones is one of the most influential people in the history of recorded music, yet I would guess that, in 2018, many casual music fans would be hard-pressed to explain what exactly he actually did. Jones’ name has been legendary in music circles for more than half a century, but much of his résumé consists of terms and vocations that are now obsolete, at least as far as mainstream pop is concerned. Read more
Just Behind the Beat. Nate Chinen new book, Playing Changes: Jazz for the New Century, is “A perfectly timed, well-tuned chronicle of the past, present, and future of jazz.” Chinen documents what happened after jazz lost its cultural dominance—its evolution in the past few decades into a much woolier, more various, and more relevant arena than most of the public might imagine. The author had a perfect perch to track that development as a New York Times jazz critic for more than a dozen years. Read more
Visit our home page for more articles, and at the top of this page register your email to receive notification of Race Inquiry Digest updates. Click here for earlier Digests.