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If We Are Brave

Essays from Black Americana

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The popular Washington Post contributing opinion columnist challenges readers to have uncomfortable conversations about race, drawing on the first-person perspectives of the author and Americans from diverse viewpoints and walks of life.

"The United States claims to be a nation founded on an idea," writes Theodore R. Johnson, "but Americans—even though we nod our heads to that assertion—do not agree on what that idea is, what it should do, or who it is for." The reality is that America is facing an existential quandary. Its citizens do not share a common vision for a democratic system in action, and even worse, do not share a common vision for what the country should be. We use the same words, but do not speak the same language.

If We Are Brave is a keen-eyed and sobering examination of this rift and how race exposes and challenges traditional conceptions of national identity, national mythology, and American democracy. It is both a cultural exploration and a consideration of the American experiment through the eyes and experiences of Americans of different generations that cuts across race, ethnicity, gender, region, religion, and class. Johnson reveals the subtle ways that racialized conceptions of the American identity and the imperfect culture of democracy have hindered our ability to connect with one another, carefully piecing together first-person accounts ranging from a Rust Belt diner to the back of a police car to a jail cell.

A beautiful but harsh indictment of a nation that aspires to be a more perfect union yet has consistently and painfully fallen short, If We Were Brave is a portrait of a nation at the precipice. It is an eye-opening, essential resource in a pivotal election year which will define America's future, and a much-needed beacon of truth that sheds a bright light on who we are.

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    • Library Journal

      May 1, 2024

      Johnson (When the Stars Begin To Fall: Overcoming Racism and Renewing the Promise of America), senior advisor at New America and a contributing columnist at the Washington Post, writes about race and social justice from a personal perspective and offers an indictment of the nation riven by difference. Prepub Alert.

      Copyright 2024 Library Journal

      Copyright 2024 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      October 1, 2024
      A critical examination of weak points in American democracy. Johnson, author ofWhen the Stars Begin To Fall: Overcoming Racism and Renewing the Promise of America (2021), served as a White House Fellow, military professor, and speechwriter. From a churchgoing culture he learned that everything happens for a reason and that there is always an explanation when God's will doesn't make sense-- "The Lord works in mysterious ways." These credos also apply to democracy, he says. When it seems comfortable "coexisting with slavery and oppression and dispossession and state violence--well, that is just democracy working in mysterious ways." Except for banning slavery, legal barriers to Black equality were not eliminated until the civil rights acts of the 1960s, which proved a bonanza to Republicans as most white Southern Democrats switched parties, eliminating the minority status that Republicans had held since before the New Deal. It's no secret that Black people overwhelmingly vote Democratic and that while only half of white people identify as Republicans, they account for 95% of the party's congressional members. There is no shortage of Black conservatives, including Johnson's father, who advocate self-help and suspicion of government, but they rarely vote Republican. No radical, Johnson writes that America remains more or less a land of opportunity where energetic members of its historical minority, like himself, do well, but most can't escape traditional if extralegal pressures of hostile white institutions--police et al. Asian Americans, meanwhile, have outclassed many whites, who resent their superiority in education and income but hold them up as a "model minority." Johnson paints a lucid picture of how minorities negotiate values we are supposed to share and reframes issues like voting and policing to reveal warning signs of problems that reasonable citizens both white and Black are nowhere near solving. Evenhanded and astute essays on race.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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