Lies about Black people How to combat racist stereotypes and why it matters

Omékongo Dibinga

Book - 2023

"In this honest and welcoming book, diversity and inclusion expert, professor, and award-winning speaker Dr. Omekongo Dibinga argues that we must embark on a massive undertaking to re-educate ourselves on the stereotypes that have proven harmful, and too often deadly, to the Black community"--

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2nd Floor 305.896/Dibinga Due Nov 22, 2024
Subjects
Published
Guilford, Connecticut : Prometheus Books [2023]
Language
English
Main Author
Omékongo Dibinga (author)
Physical Description
xv, 213 pages ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 197-213).
ISBN
9781633888784
  • Foreword: "I'm Going to Live the Life I Sing about in My Song"
  • Introduction: The Love That Hate Produced
  • 1. A Word on My Words
  • 2. Racism Is the Real "Big Lie"!
  • 3. Why We Must Fight Lies about Black People
  • 4. You Don't Know What You Don't Know
  • 5. Your Racial Vocabulary
  • 6. Lies the Media Told Us
  • 7. Do Black People Feel Pain?
  • 8. Aren't Black People More Likely to Be Criminals?
  • 9. Black People Just Can't Afford to Live Here!
  • 10. Black People Are Just Bad with Money!
  • 11. Black People Can't Swim: The Great Double Entendre
  • 12. The White-Privilege Card
  • 13. The Lies behind White Lives Matter and All Lives Matter
  • 14. Critical Race Theory and Disinformation
  • 15. Black Intelligence: Real or Artificial?
  • 16. Anti-Blackness Is Global
  • 17. Be a LEADer!
  • 18. Is Your Organization Antiracist?
  • 19. Does Your Organization Need a Diversity Dictionary?
  • 20. Beyond Performative Celebrations of the Black Experience
  • 21. Increasing Black Representation in Your Organizations
  • 22. Elevating Black Students: Becoming a More Culturally Competent Teacher
  • 23. Let's Go UPstander!
  • Glossary
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Dibinga (The Upstander's Guide to an Outstanding Life), a lecturer on Intercultural Communication at American University, investigates in this passionate study the roots of negative stereotypes about African Americans. Drawing on interviews with people across the racial, social, and economic spectrum, Dibinga shows how deeply these stereotypes have affected perception, communication, and understanding. He addresses stereotypes regarding Black people's pain tolerance, intellectual ability, and criminality, and highlights prejudice toward African Americans in finance, housing, and the media. Dibinga demonstrates the devastating consequences of such stereotypes by focusing on policing and the justice system. For example, he recalls the "reign of terror" unleashed by Boston police against the city's Black community, including his own family, after the 1989 murder of a pregnant white woman, Carol Stuart, allegedly by a Black man (this was later proved to be a false story invented by the murderer, Stuart's white husband). Dibinga also showcases stories of hope and reconciliation, noting that Carol Stuart's family started a foundation in her name to give scholarships to high school students from the neighborhood where she was slain. With useful tools for educators, including activity prompts, this is a worthwhile new antiracist workbook. Readers of Ibram X. Kendi's How to Be an Antiracist should take note. (July)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

How to identify and resist some of the most common and insidious racial prejudices. "This book is designed for activists," writes Dibinga, a professor of intercultural communication, and dedicated to "those who want to know not only what lies they were told about Black people but also why those lies were told and why those lies continue to be told." The author provides a mix of analyses of the lineage of particular racial stereotypes, interviews with those who have endured discrimination, exercises for readers who want to assess their own biases, and even poetry articulating the author's passionate take on the impact of bigotry and enduring faith in the power of education and love to overcome the evils of irrationality and hatred. One of the greatest strengths of the book is Dibinga's frank engagement with the everyday expression--and destructive consequences--of racial assumptions. The author accessibly frames the features of contemporary stereotypes via historical precedents, and we never lose sight of the topic's intimate, urgent relevance to the psychological and physical well-being of Black Americans. Access to health care and fair treatment by the judicial system, for instance, are critically shaped by racial assumptions, and these assumptions are formed, in part, by the media we consume and its overt or covert insinuations about racial being. The author's discussion of cinematic depictions of race is particularly incisive. Dibinga also provides illuminating commentary on the need for an evolving understanding of what genuine inclusivity would look and sound like. He reminds us that Blackness is a fluid social construct brought into being in relation to other racial categories. With serious, loving care, the author demonstrates, we can do much better in constructing that identity and in seeking a more just and vital social understanding. Michael Eric Dyson provides the foreword. An astute, provocative survey of toxic assumptions about race and how to effectively challenge them. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.