deerstalker

https://blacknerdproblems.com/read-the-revolution-books-for-social-justice-discourse/

Amidst the current state of the world, many folks find themselves (once again) explaining race, systemic racism, and the fight for equity and social justice to children. The teacher in me will always, ALWAYS, recommend books to support any lesson and conversation. Keeping that same energy, here are some of our favorite books to engage children and adults in justice discourse.

Let’s read the revolution!

PreK – 3

Woke Baby by Mahogany L. Browne, illustrated by Theodore Taylor, III

Day one. That’s where you start and that’s where this book begins. From that beautiful Black baby raising their fist in the air, to the abolishment of ceilings (glass or otherwise); this is a must read for every little revolutionary.

A is for Activist written and illustrated by Innosanto Nagara

A is for Activist is packed with alliteration and consciousness. “Kings are fine for storytime/Knights are fun to play/But when people make decisions/we will choose the people’s way.” Don’t let the age recommendations fool you, everybody can get these lessons.

Strictly No Elephants by Lisa Mantchev, illustrated by Taeeun Yoo

This book tackles exclusion and creating your own spaces when a boy and his elephant are kept from Pet Club and stumble upon a girl and her skunk who were also turned away. There’s conversation here about how when one group is marginalized, others are as well. These kids didn’t fight to be included, instead they made their own INCLUSIVE club. There’s something to be said about having a seat at the table and something else to be said about building your own table.

The Day You Begin by Jacqueline Woodson, illustrated by Rafael Lopez


“There will be times when you walk into a room, and no one there is quite like you.” This book tackles feeling different, being fearful of being the “only” in a room and finally, celebrating that individuality is the standard- not conformity and homogenized experiences.

Middle Grade

Internment by Samira Ahmed

Set in a “not-so” dystopian America where Muslim Americans must be “registered,” Layla Amin and her family are considered threats by their neighbors. The Amins find themselves and other fellow Muslims placed in internment camps by the Exclusion Authority. There is violence and brutality within the camps; people are missing, and this teen and her new friends are determined to activate. With the help of an ally and her Jewish boyfriend who is outside of the camps, a slew of blog posts shed light on the systemic abuse of her people.

“We Rise, We Resist, We Raise Our Voices” edited by Wade Hudson and Cheryl Willis Hudson

This book carries the voices and artistry of 50 diverse leaders in the literary and art worlds. Poems, letters, art, and personal essays cover 96 pages and include the voices of Sharon Draper (Out of My Mind), Jason Reynolds (All American Boys), Jaqueline Woodson (Brown Girl Dreaming) and more.

One Crazy Summer by Rita Williams Garcia


While Delphine and her sisters visit their mother, whom they haven’t seen in some time, they attend a Black Panther Youth Camp and discover their mother’s work in social justice. During this crazy summer, the girls learn both about their family and their country.

Teen

The Women Who Caught the Babies: A Story of African American Midwives by Eloise Greenfield

Poet and children’s book author Eloise Greenfield is known for her exquisite rhythmic writings. In this book, she details Black pre-natal care through the historic background of African midwives and the ancestry brought to America by enslaved Africans. This books uses poetry, prose, and essays to make connections between Black births from the time of slavery to present-day America.

All Boys Aren’t Blue by George M. Johnson

This memoir follows the life of a LGBTQIA+ activist and prominent journalist George M Johnson. He takes his readers on a journey through personal essays that illustrate memories of having his teeth kicked out by bullies at five years old, times of going to flea markets with his grandmother, his first sexual encounters, and more. It is a telling of the trials and triumphs of a boy growing up Black and queer.

Lifting As We Climb: Black Women’s Battle for the Ballot Box by Evette Dionne

Much of the history shared about the woman’s suffrage movement is surrounded by stories of Susan B. Anthony and the Women’s Rights Convention at Seneca Falls in 1913. During that same time, Black women were fighting not only for the right to vote, but for the basic civil right to be treated as an equal human in America. Author Evette Dionne uncovers the “forgotten” truth and voices of the Black women (like Ida B Wells and Mary Church Terrell) who shaped the suffrage movement, civil rights and abolitionist history.

Adult

So You Want to Talk About Race by Ijeoma Oluo

“Well, you shouldn’t wear red lipstick anyway. On your lips, you look like a clown.” The chapter about microaggressions had me ready to fight Jennifer who said this to grade school aged Ijeoma. Ijeoma Olu’s examination of race in America is an accessible read that tackles everything from intersectionality, police brutality, affirmative action, the school-to-prison pipeline, and so much more. First giving a definition of racism, she moves through each chapter inserting her lived experiences, illustrating what’s wrong, and the harm that results. Educating yet a book that will make you uncomfortable, it is certainly worth reading and rereading again.

Why Are All the Black Kids Sitting Together in the Cafeteria? by Beverly Daniel Tatum

I’m grateful that even before I was able to purchase my own copy of this extraordinary book, chapters of the book were required reading in my curriculum and the author, Dr. Beverly Daniel Tatum was mentioned in plenty of lectures as a Communications major. This one is a blessed resource on the development of racial identity and a framework on thinking and talking about race when it comes to our children. A book so powerful and necessary for educators, parents, students, and practically everybody under the sun to read–but educators of all ages and grade levels, especially non-Black ones, should have a copy and read to gain a greater understanding of the blindspots, folks in their position, can miss.

Pushout: The Criminalization of Black Girls in Schools by Monique W. Morris

There are some troubling statistics regarding Black children, especially Black girls in the K-12 school system. Black girls in high school are 6 times more likely than their white female counterparts to be suspended. Black girls are 3 times more likely to receive 1 or more in-school suspensions than white female students. Black girls are also twice as likely to receive corporal punishment than white female students. There are more troubling statistics that will make your heart hurt. Monique W. Morris, who is also the co-founder of the National Black Women’s Justice Institute brings to light, in book form, the terrifying move to criminalize Black girl children in schools and the tactics that defeat, dismiss, and demean them. The complexities of the issue include taking a look at poverty, incarceration and dropouts and offers tactics to help protect our girls who live in systems that were never created to protect them.

This list in barely a drop in the bucket of books out there that you can read to up your knowledge on the social justice, racism, and all topics that surround and branch off, and now is a great time to dive in head first. Let us know what books you are reading during this time.

Want to get Black Nerd Problems updates sent directly to you? Sign up here.
Follow us on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram!

The post Read the Revolution: Books for Social Justice Discourse appeared first on Black Nerd Problems.

June 17, 2020

Read the Revolution: Books for Social Justice Discourse

https://blacknerdproblems.com/read-the-revolution-books-for-social-justice-discourse/

Amidst the current state of the world, many folks find themselves (once again) explaining race, systemic racism, and the fight for equity and social justice to children. The teacher in me will always, ALWAYS, recommend books to support any lesson and conversation. Keeping that same energy, here are some of our favorite books to engage children and adults in justice discourse.

Let’s read the revolution!

PreK – 3

Woke Baby by Mahogany L. Browne, illustrated by Theodore Taylor, III

Day one. That’s where you start and that’s where this book begins. From that beautiful Black baby raising their fist in the air, to the abolishment of ceilings (glass or otherwise); this is a must read for every little revolutionary.

A is for Activist written and illustrated by Innosanto Nagara

A is for Activist is packed with alliteration and consciousness. “Kings are fine for storytime/Knights are fun to play/But when people make decisions/we will choose the people’s way.” Don’t let the age recommendations fool you, everybody can get these lessons.

Strictly No Elephants by Lisa Mantchev, illustrated by Taeeun Yoo

This book tackles exclusion and creating your own spaces when a boy and his elephant are kept from Pet Club and stumble upon a girl and her skunk who were also turned away. There’s conversation here about how when one group is marginalized, others are as well. These kids didn’t fight to be included, instead they made their own INCLUSIVE club. There’s something to be said about having a seat at the table and something else to be said about building your own table.

The Day You Begin by Jacqueline Woodson, illustrated by Rafael Lopez


“There will be times when you walk into a room, and no one there is quite like you.” This book tackles feeling different, being fearful of being the “only” in a room and finally, celebrating that individuality is the standard- not conformity and homogenized experiences.

Middle Grade

Internment by Samira Ahmed

Set in a “not-so” dystopian America where Muslim Americans must be “registered,” Layla Amin and her family are considered threats by their neighbors. The Amins find themselves and other fellow Muslims placed in internment camps by the Exclusion Authority. There is violence and brutality within the camps; people are missing, and this teen and her new friends are determined to activate. With the help of an ally and her Jewish boyfriend who is outside of the camps, a slew of blog posts shed light on the systemic abuse of her people.

“We Rise, We Resist, We Raise Our Voices” edited by Wade Hudson and Cheryl Willis Hudson

This book carries the voices and artistry of 50 diverse leaders in the literary and art worlds. Poems, letters, art, and personal essays cover 96 pages and include the voices of Sharon Draper (Out of My Mind), Jason Reynolds (All American Boys), Jaqueline Woodson (Brown Girl Dreaming) and more.

One Crazy Summer by Rita Williams Garcia


While Delphine and her sisters visit their mother, whom they haven’t seen in some time, they attend a Black Panther Youth Camp and discover their mother’s work in social justice. During this crazy summer, the girls learn both about their family and their country.

Teen

The Women Who Caught the Babies: A Story of African American Midwives by Eloise Greenfield

Poet and children’s book author Eloise Greenfield is known for her exquisite rhythmic writings. In this book, she details Black pre-natal care through the historic background of African midwives and the ancestry brought to America by enslaved Africans. This books uses poetry, prose, and essays to make connections between Black births from the time of slavery to present-day America.

All Boys Aren’t Blue by George M. Johnson

This memoir follows the life of a LGBTQIA+ activist and prominent journalist George M Johnson. He takes his readers on a journey through personal essays that illustrate memories of having his teeth kicked out by bullies at five years old, times of going to flea markets with his grandmother, his first sexual encounters, and more. It is a telling of the trials and triumphs of a boy growing up Black and queer.

Lifting As We Climb: Black Women’s Battle for the Ballot Box by Evette Dionne

Much of the history shared about the woman’s suffrage movement is surrounded by stories of Susan B. Anthony and the Women’s Rights Convention at Seneca Falls in 1913. During that same time, Black women were fighting not only for the right to vote, but for the basic civil right to be treated as an equal human in America. Author Evette Dionne uncovers the “forgotten” truth and voices of the Black women (like Ida B Wells and Mary Church Terrell) who shaped the suffrage movement, civil rights and abolitionist history.

Adult

So You Want to Talk About Race by Ijeoma Oluo

“Well, you shouldn’t wear red lipstick anyway. On your lips, you look like a clown.” The chapter about microaggressions had me ready to fight Jennifer who said this to grade school aged Ijeoma. Ijeoma Olu’s examination of race in America is an accessible read that tackles everything from intersectionality, police brutality, affirmative action, the school-to-prison pipeline, and so much more. First giving a definition of racism, she moves through each chapter inserting her lived experiences, illustrating what’s wrong, and the harm that results. Educating yet a book that will make you uncomfortable, it is certainly worth reading and rereading again.

Why Are All the Black Kids Sitting Together in the Cafeteria? by Beverly Daniel Tatum

I’m grateful that even before I was able to purchase my own copy of this extraordinary book, chapters of the book were required reading in my curriculum and the author, Dr. Beverly Daniel Tatum was mentioned in plenty of lectures as a Communications major. This one is a blessed resource on the development of racial identity and a framework on thinking and talking about race when it comes to our children. A book so powerful and necessary for educators, parents, students, and practically everybody under the sun to read–but educators of all ages and grade levels, especially non-Black ones, should have a copy and read to gain a greater understanding of the blindspots, folks in their position, can miss.

Pushout: The Criminalization of Black Girls in Schools by Monique W. Morris

There are some troubling statistics regarding Black children, especially Black girls in the K-12 school system. Black girls in high school are 6 times more likely than their white female counterparts to be suspended. Black girls are 3 times more likely to receive 1 or more in-school suspensions than white female students. Black girls are also twice as likely to receive corporal punishment than white female students. There are more troubling statistics that will make your heart hurt. Monique W. Morris, who is also the co-founder of the National Black Women’s Justice Institute brings to light, in book form, the terrifying move to criminalize Black girl children in schools and the tactics that defeat, dismiss, and demean them. The complexities of the issue include taking a look at poverty, incarceration and dropouts and offers tactics to help protect our girls who live in systems that were never created to protect them.

This list in barely a drop in the bucket of books out there that you can read to up your knowledge on the social justice, racism, and all topics that surround and branch off, and now is a great time to dive in head first. Let us know what books you are reading during this time.

Want to get Black Nerd Problems updates sent directly to you? Sign up here.
Follow us on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram!

The post Read the Revolution: Books for Social Justice Discourse appeared first on Black Nerd Problems.


June 16, 2020

5 Charged With Hate Crime In Attack Of Black Pastor In Virginia

https://www.essence.com/news/virginia-pastor-attacked-white-mob/

Leon McCray Sr., a Black Virginia pastor who pulled a gun on five alleged attackers, will no longer face charges for brandishing the weapon. Meanwhile, although no one else was arrested at the time of the incident on June 1, the attackers are now facing varying hate crime charges, WHSV reports.

According to the news station, McCray, 61, called the police on June 1 to report an attack by a group of people at an apartment building he owns in Edingurgh.

The incident started when he saw two individuals dragging an old fridge to the dumpsters at his property. McCray asked the people to leave, which they did after getting angry. However, they later came back with three other individuals and began threatening McCray and “using all types of racial slurs,” according to the pastor at  Lighthouse Church & Marketplace Ministries International.

“Racial epithets, and the N word, and your Black life, your M-F Black life don’t make, it doesn’t make a difference in this county, it doesn’t make a difference to me, and we will kill you,” McCray told WHSV.

The group surrounded him, and one man started head-butting him, leaving McCray no choice to defend himself by drawing his gun and calling 911.

“It got to the point where this is really getting really, really bad,” McCray said. “I couldn’t leave, I couldn’t do anything, and with the threats, I felt to save my life, I had to draw my gun.”

However, when deputies arrived, only one deputy spoke to McCray, and even then didn’t ask him what happened. Instead, officers apparently spoke to the individuals who attacked him, before taking McCray’s weapon and arresting him in front of his attackers, who were all white.

“How humiliating,” he told NVDaily. “How dehumanizing … to look at this mob of individuals cheering on the sidelines waving as I was carted off to go to jail.”

The community in Shenandoah County stood by the pastor, demanding justice in the case, according to WHSV. And even then McCray had to demand justice for himself.

“I met with the sheriff, I wrote, you know after I was arrested, the next day I wrote a letter and asked him for an opportunity to tell my story, which I really had not told,” McCray said.

The Sheriff met with McCray on June 3 at which point he determined that the charges against the pastor “was certainly not appropriate.”

“Actually, as I told Mr. McCray, if I were faced with similar circumstances, I would have probably done the same thing,” Shenandoah County Sheriff Timothy Carter said in a video address to the public.

Then, on Thursday night, the sheriff obtained warrants to arrest the five people involved in the alleged attack on various hate crime charges.

According to the report, Donny Salyers, 43; Dennis Salyers, 26; Farrah Salyers, 42 and Christopher Sharp, 57 are all facing charges of felony abduction, assault by mob and assault – hate crime.

Amanda Salyers, 26, is facing charges of assault by mob and assault – hate crime.

In addition to those charges, Dennis and Donny Salyers are already facing charges of assault and battery, while Amanda Salyers and Christopher Sharp were already charged with trespassing.

The five are all being held without bond as the investigation is still ongoing.

According to WHSV, two of the sheriff’s staff supervisors have been placed on administrative leave pending an administrative review of the initial incident.

The sheriff has also personally apologized to McCray.

“I want the people of Shenandoah County to know I and the Sheriff’s Office staff appreciate and care about the minority communities, and especially our Black community, in Shenandoah County,” Sheriff Carter said. “Also, I continue to support and recognize the importance of your Constitutional rights, especially your 2nd Amendment right to protect yourself and your family.”

The post 5 Charged With Hate Crime In Attack Of Black Pastor In Virginia appeared first on Essence.


June 16, 2020

DC FanDome is a 24-Hour Event to Immerse Fans into the DC Multiverse

https://blackgirlnerds.com/dc-fandome-is-a-24-hour-event-to-immerse-fans-into-the-dc-multiverse/

DC FanDome is an unprecedented, 24 hour, global event featuring the largest virtual gathering of talent announcements and content reveals in the history of DC. The event takes place on August 22nd at 10am PDT and will be accessible around the world for 24 hours at DCFanDome.com.

The event will immerse fans into the DC Multiverse, with new content reveals and announcements from WB Games, Film, TV, and comics, as well as an unprecedented opportunity to hear from the casts and creators behind your favorite feature films and TV series, including: Aquaman, The Batman, Batwoman, Black Adam, Black Lightning, DC Super Hero Girls, DC’s Legends of Tomorrow, DC’s Stargirl, Doom Patrol, The Flash, Harley Quinn, Lucifer, Pennyworth, SHAZAM!, the SnyderCut, The Suicide Squad, Supergirl, Superman & Lois, Teen Titans GO!, Titans, Watchmen, Young Justice: Outsiders and, coming this fall to theaters worldwide, Wonder Woman 1984.

All of this content will be virtually housed in 6 different, fully-programmed areas inside the virtual DC FanDome: “Hall of Heroes” (Main Hall), DC WatchVerse, DC YouVerse, DC KidsVerse, DC InsiderVerse and DC FunVerse. 

Content will be available in 10 languages including English, French, Italian, German, Spanish, Brazil Portuguese, Korean, Japanese, and Chinese. Additionally, content programmed from specific countries will be in their native language.

The second annual celebration of Black nerd culture returns with the all-new Blerd & Boujee House at DC FanDome, bringing Blerds, LatinxGeeks and all nerds “party-with-a-purpose” vibes. As anyone lucky enough to get into the first- ever Blerd & Boujee boat party (featuring DJ D-Nice) at San Diego Comic-Con 2019 can attest, fans will not want to miss connections and conversations designed for the culture.

There’s nothing more important to DC than our fans, and we want to showcase you! In partnership with Talenthouse, DC FanDome today launched a call for your best DC Fan Art & Fandom displays. Show us your cosplay, makeup, tattoos and even your own Batcave! Be sure to submit your best at create.DCFanDome.com for a chance to be featured inside this virtual world event, and demonstrate to people in your home country and across the globe that you are the ultimate DC Super Fan. Selected artists on the day of our event will be voted on by the community in each of our two competitions in order to help our judges pick selected artist winners. Selected artist winners will receive part of a cash prize pool courtesy of DC and Talenthouse.

Be sure to check back at the official site, DCFanDome.com, frequently for additional updates on what will be happening inside the DC FanDome, including exciting new content on our new blog, the Daily Star, which kicks off with a welcoming note from Jim Lee himself. Also, follow the social channels below for frequent updates about participating cast members, creators, writers, artists and game developers you can expect to see.

 

The post DC FanDome is a 24-Hour Event to Immerse Fans into the DC Multiverse appeared first on Black Girl Nerds.


June 16, 2020

Mars Exhibits ‘Green Glow’ in Atmosphere, Just Like Earth

https://nerdist.com/article/mars-has-green-glow-like-earth/

The European Space Agency (ESA) has just announced that its ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter (TGO) has identified a long-suspected “green glow” around Mars. The green glow is due to the interaction of sunlight with atoms and molecules in Mars’ atmosphere. To date, we’ve only observed the phenomenon around one other planet: Earth. Now, the scientists who’ve discovered the Red Planet’s green glow say it could help us better understand the planet’s atmosphere. And how to land safely on its surface.

The European Space Agency has discovered a "green glow" around Mars.

An artist’s illustration of the green glow around Mars. ESA 

Futurism reported on the finding, which was outlined in a paper recently published in the journal, Nature. According to the paper, this discovery marks the first time scientists have observed the “day glow” and “night glow” that generate the “green line” around Earth around Mars. Or any other planet. The discovery also stands as long sought-after confirmatory evidence of predictions regarding the Martian atmosphere, which date back 40 years.

“Previous observations hadn’t captured any kind of green glow at Mars, so we decided to reorient the UVIS [aboard the TGO] to point at the ‘edge’ of Mars, similar to the perspective you see in images of Earth taken from the ISS,” co-author of the study, Ann Carine Vandaele of the Institut Royal d’Aéronomie Spatiale de Belgique in Belgium, said in an ESA press release. The UVIS is the “ultraviolet and visible spectrometer”. It serves as one observational tool aboard the TGO’s “NOMAD” suite of instruments.

The European Space Agency has discovered a "green glow" around Mars.

The green glow around Earth. NASA

The green glow the TGO observed is the result of two different processes occurring in Mars’ atmosphere. The day glow occurs when sunlight directly excites atoms and breaks apart molecules in Mars’ thin atmosphere. The break-up of CO2 is most likely a big reason for this glow. The night glow, on the other hand, occurs when disintegrated molecules recombine. (Light energy is released in both the disintegration and reformation processes, much of which is in the visible part of the electromagnetic spectrum, at the wavelength we perceive as green.)

Moving forward, scientists will look to use measurements of this green glow as a way to glean more information about the composition and dynamics of the Martian atmosphere. The ESA says that these measurements of the atmosphere will, in turn, be “key to [operating] the missions we send to the Red Planet” because of, for example, the way parachuting probes will experience drag. And anybody who’s interested in the potential for life beyond Earth most definitely wants those probes to land safely.

What do you think about the ESA’s discovery of a green glow around Mars? Do you think we’ll find some exoplanets with the same kind of luminous ring in the near future? Light up the comments with your thoughts, people!

Feature image: European Space Agency

The post Mars Exhibits ‘Green Glow’ in Atmosphere, Just Like Earth appeared first on Nerdist.


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