Season 5: Episode 3 | Angie Thomas and Literary Activism
Angie Thomas’s The Hate U Give found a raw edge that audiences were keen to address.
Angie Thomas’s The Hate U Give found a raw edge that audiences were keen to address.
College students are often excited to discuss the subtle radicalism of Iola Leroy by Frances Ellen Watkins Harper.
The 1990s gave way to a vibrant literary outpouring of African American novels that offered myriad representational possibilities freeing readers and writers alike.
A graphic novel engages black history and Captain America.
How an excerpt from an upcoming novel became a popular short story.
A brief take on a photo titled “The Sisterhood, 1977,” which has been a source of inspiration for countless readers and viewers.
Here’s why Richard Wright’s autobiography Black Boy, Margaret Walker Alexander’s novel Jubilee and John Oliver Killens’s novel ‘Sippi are held in high regard by most black folks from Mississippi.
Here’s how a book can be initially misunderstood and ignored, then gain literary recognition and acclaim, become adopted by the education system and taught broadly, and then become banned.
The story of Richard Wright’s Native Son, the first black American best-seller, a novel that is both a shocking page-turner, and a philosophical provocation stirring controversy to this day.
Here’s how high school students at a school in Maryland responded to Toni Morrison’s the Seven Days from Song of Solomon.