Serena Williams has said concerns over motherhood have affected her recent form.
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There’s Nothing Wrong With Black English | The Atlantic
Accepting it as an alternative form of the language, and not a degraded one, requires being open to artists employing it in their work, even if they didn’t grow up speaking it.
View MoreThe pioneering prints of Dox Thrash | CBS New
Dox Thrash revolutionized printmaking in the 1930s.
View MoreA black fire chief faces hatred online before his first day on the job | The Washington Post
The enemy is hiding in plain sight, and digital pseudonyms are their new hoods.
View More“Ouvrir la Voix”: A Radically Frank Documentary About the Experience of Black Women in France | The New Yorker
“The word ‘race’ has to be spoken, because it exists, it’s materialized in our lives, in our bodies, in our perceptions of our bodies, in our relations with people, so I think it’s hypocrisy to ban it from the Constitution . . . Race is truly a reality.”
View MoreKwaku Anansi: The only folklore character to travel out of Africa and become a global symbol of resistance | Face2Face Africa
KOLUMN Magazine celebrates the lives of People of Color by giving our world texture.The West African folktale character is a spider with human characteristics from the Akan culture of West Africa.
View MoreWatch the Emotional First Trailer for Barry Jenkins’s New Film ‘If Beale Street Could Talk’ | Vice
The ‘Moonlight’ director is making his return to the big screen with an adaptation of James Baldwin’s 1974 novel.
View MoreHow to Win Elections in a System ‘Not Set Up for Us’ | The Atlantic
The Collective PAC’s Black Campaign School is backed by—and a challenge to—the Democratic establishment. It’s trying to increase representation in a country where 90 percent of all elected officials are white.
View MorePossible key to black boys’ academic success: Hire black men as elementary school teachers | Chicago Tribune
Nationwide, 2 percent of public school teachers are African-American males
View MoreHow a Nearly Successful Slave Revolt Was Intentionally Lost to History | Smithsonian Magazine
More than 500 slaves fought for their freedom in this oft-overlooked rebellion
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