An Architecture of Healing: Transforming Racism
It is our goal that no one leaves the building unchanged and without learning something new about Fort Worth, its residents, and its history.
The Future is Another Country
It is our goal that no one leaves the building unchanged and without learning something new about Fort Worth, its residents, and its history.
After seven years of Black Lives Matter, and looking back at several decades of mass incarceration, justice on paper seems less of a triumph.
While white supremacists seek confirmation of their personal racial inheritance, they are often confronted with what they regard as deeply discrediting information, such as mixed-race ancestry. This new type of genetic information creates what we call a genetic stigma—a significant gap between the person’s prior conception of themselves and the way others in the broader community perceive them.
The comparison of Greensboro and Charlottesville makes it clear that white supremacy never left and white backlash continues to challenge equality as the country grasps for human rights.
Few today would be surprised that the harshest repression following the confrontation in Greenville was not against the right-wing paramilitary organization but against members of the IWW.
The Activist History Review invites article proposals for our October issue, “The Road to Charlottesville.”