United States -- Race relations
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United States -- Race relations
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United States
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- Subject of41
- Be a revolution, how everyday people are fighting oppression and changing the world--and how you can, too, Ijeoma Oluo
- Sundown towns, a hidden dimension of American racism, James W. Loewen
- The breakthrough, politics and race in the age of Obama, Gwen Ifill
- The movement made us, a father, a son, and the legacy of a freedom ride, David J. Dennis Jr. in collaboration with David J. Dennis Sr
- Uncomfortable conversations with a black man, Emmanuel Acho
- We were eight years in power, an American tragedy, Ta-Nehisi Coates
- Confronting discrimination against immigrants, Carla Mooney
- How to be an antiracist, Ibram X. Kendi
- The Eyes on the prize civil rights reader, documents, speeches, and firsthand accounts from the Black freedom struggle, 1954-1990, general editors, Clayborne Carson ... [and others]
- War in the ring, Joe Louis, Max Schmeling, and the fight between America and Hitler, John Florio and Ouisie Shapiro
- I'm still here, Black dignity in a world made for whiteness, Austin Channing Brown
- A history of me, written by Adrea Theodore ; illustrated by Erin K. Robinson
- Between the world and me, Ta-Nehisi Coates
- Fighting with love, the legacy of John Lewis, Lesa Cline-Ransome ; illustrated by James E. Ransome
- An indigenous peoples' history of the United States, Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz
- Dreams from my father, a story of race and inheritance, Barack Obama
- Race relations, edited by the New York Times editorial staff
- I am not your negro., written by James Baldwin ; directed by Raoul Peck, Widescreen
- Stamped from the beginning, the definitive history of racist ideas in America, Ibram X. Kendi
- Caste, the origins of our discontents, Isabel Wilkerson
- What is the Black Lives Matter movement?, Hedreich Nichols with Kelisa Wing
- How to be less stupid about race, on racism, White supremacy, and the racial divide, Crystal M. Fleming
- Let it shine, stories of Black women freedom fighters, Andrea Davis Pinkney ; illustrated by Stephen Alcorn
- O.J., made in America, ESPN Films presents a Laylow Films production ; produced & directed by Ezra Edelman ; produced by Caroline Waterlow ; producers, Tamara Rosenberg, Nina Krstic, Deirdre Fenton, Libby Geist, Erin Leyden, Connor Schell, Blu-ray/Widescreen
- Unequal, a story of America, Michael Eric Dyson & Marc Favreau
- Loudmouth., Greenwich Entertainment ; Bron Releasing and Salmira Productions present a Get Lifted Film Co./Group Effort Films/Massenberg Media/Naked Edge Films production ; in association with Creative Wealth Media, Olive Hill Media ; in association with Hot Docs Partners, XRM ; executive producers, John Legend, Ty Stiklorius, Austyn Biggers [and others] ; produced by Daniel J. Chalfen, Mike Jackson, Kedar Massenburg ; written, produced and directed by Josh Alexander, DVD/Widescreen
- The groom will keep his name, and other vows I've made about race, resistance, and romance, Matt Ortile
- Sleeping with the ancestors, how I followed the footprints of slavery, Joseph McGill, Jr. and Herb Frazier
- God and race, a guide for moving beyond black fists and white knuckles, John Siebeling and Wayne Francis
- So you want to talk about race, Ijeoma Oluo
- The Ku Klux Klan, a guide to an American subculture, Martin Gitlin
- A renaissance of our own, a memoir & manifesto on reimagining, Rachel Elizabeth Cargle
- Don't label me, an incredible conversation for divided times, Irshad Manji
- What is white privilege?, Leigh Ann Erickson with Kelisa Wing
- Having our say, the Delany sisters' first 100 years, by Sarah Louise and Annie Elizabeth Delany, with Amy Hill Hearth
- How to be an antiracist, Ibram X. Kendi
- Who was Ida B. Wells?, by Sarah Fabiny ; illustrated by Ted Hammond
- Enough, the phony leaders, dead-end movements, and culture of failure that are undermining Black America-- and what we can do about it, Juan Williams
- An African American and Latinx history of the United States, Paul Ortiz
- The 1619 Project, a new origin story, created by Nikole Hannah-Jones and The New York Times Magazine
- Go back and get it, a memoir of race, inheritance, and intergenerational healing, Dionne Ford