The long road home On Blackness and belonging

Debra Thompson

Book - 2022

"From a leading scholar on the politics of race comes a work of family history, memoir, and insight gained from a unique journey across the continent, on what it is to be Black in North America."--

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Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Published
Toronto, Ontario : Scribner Canada 2022.
Language
English
Main Author
Debra Thompson (author)
Item Description
Includes reading group guide.
Physical Description
270 pages ; 21 cm
Issued also in electronic format
Bibliography
Includes index.
ISBN
9781982182465
  • Beginnings: We Came Back Too Soon
  • 1. The Great White North
  • 2. The Only One
  • 3. The Freedom Trail
  • 4. Appalachian Elegies
  • 5. The Black Metropolis
  • 6. The Western Frontier
  • 7. Borderlands
  • 8. Je reviendrai parmi vous
  • Epilogue: Neverwhere and Everyhere
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Further Reading
  • Permissions
  • Index
  • Reading Group Guide
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

McGill University political scientist Thompson (The Schematic State) mixes memoir and pointed social critique in this revealing study of "the peculiar nuances of racism in Canada and the United States." Thompson's great-great-grandparents fled the American South (family legend has it they escaped from a Virginia plantation that once belonged to George Washington's relatives) for Shrewsbury, Ontario, one of the last stops on the Underground Railroad, sometime before the Civil War. In 2010, Thompson moved to the U.S., pursuing a postdoctoral fellowship and teaching positions in Cambridge, Mass.; Athens, Ohio; Chicago, Ill.; and Eugene, Ore. She analyzes regional differences in racial dynamics within the U.S., noting that Oregon is home to numerous white supremacist groups, as well as America's first "officially recognized antifascist organization," and draws sharp assessments of Canada's more subtle forms of institutionalized racism, including "the selective enforcement of obscure regulations, deception, bribery, and campaigns of dissuasion" to limit Black immigration. Along the way, Thompson takes stock of Trumpism, Black Lives Matter, and other contemporary political developments; documents the discrimination and "professional sabotage" she faced in the "predominantly white, elitist space" of academia; and lucidly explains such concepts as Indigenous anticolonialism and virtue signaling. The result is a meaningful contribution to the understanding of racism. Photos. (Sept.)

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Review by Library Journal Review

Moving to the United States in 2010, McGill University political scientist Thompson felt she was reconnecting with her ancestors, who had escaped to Canada via the Underground Railroad. She follows up decade-long travels across the United States with this meditation on the meaning of home and of being a Black person in North America today.

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