![]() Black women’s anger is a powerful, unshakeable force that sends people from marginalized communities into the streets, the courtrooms, the classrooms, and beyond to fight for the more just world that our ancestors fought for and our descendants will fight for long after we’re gone. ![]() She writes that our anger has fueled every political movement in the United States, from suffrage to Civil Rights to #MeToo. What I love about Cooper’s book is that she confronts this idea head-on and flips it on its head. But Black women have a unique relationship with our emotions an overt display of emotions by Black women, particularly negative emotions like sadness, anger, and doubt, is pathologized in the U.S. The ugly truth is that some Americans have the privilege to be emotional about what is transpiring around us (e.g., white women throwing crying fits when confronted about a racist act). ![]() Americans are experiencing a myriad of emotions in response to the horrific events that are taking place in our country, from police brutality against Black bodies, racist effigies, lynchings of Black people, Covid-19 and its disproportionate effects on the health of Black and Brown people, and the lack of presidential leadership. In the words of Angela Davis, we are living in a time that we have never seen before. ![]()
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