Three or more is a riot Notes on how we got here, 2012-2025

Jelani Cobb

Book - 2025

"From the moment that Trayvon Martin's senseless murder initiated the Black Lives Matter movement in 2014, America has been convulsed by new social movements--around guns, gender violence, sexual harrassment, race, policing, and on and on--and an equally powerful backlash that abetted the rise of the MAGA movement. In this punchy, powerful collection of dispatches, mostly published in The New Yorker, Jelani Cobb pulls the signal from the noise of this chaotic era. Cobb's work as a reporter takes readers to the front lines of sometimes violent conflict, and he uses his gifts as a critic and historian tocrack open the meaning of it all. Through a stunning ̌mlange of narrative journalism, criticism, and penetrating profiles, Co...bb's writing captures the crises, characters, movements, and art of an era--and helps readers understand what might be coming next. Cobb has addednew material to this collection--retrospective pieces that bring these stories up-to-date and tie them together, shaping these powerfulshort dispatches into a cohesive, epic narrative of one of the mostconsequential periods in recent American history."--Provided by publisher.

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2nd Floor New Shelf 306.0973/Cobb (NEW SHELF) Due Dec 26, 2025
  • A Note on Proper Nouns and Proper Negroes
  • Introduction
  • I. The Parameters of Hope
  • Trayvon Martin and the Parameters of Hope (Msrch 21, 2012)
  • Rodney King, 1965-2012 (June 19, 2012)
  • Barack X (October 7, 2012)
  • Tarantino Unchained (January 2. 2013)
  • Lincoln Died for Our Sins (January 22, 2013)
  • The Segregationist's Daughter (February 7, 2013)
  • Boston and the Problem with Collective Guilt (April 20, 2013)
  • The Many Battles of Harry Belafonte (November 11, 2013)
  • Mandela and the Politics of Forgiveness (December 6, 2013)
  • What We Talk About When We Talk About Reparations (May 29, 2014)
  • Ruby Dee, 1922-2014 (June 13, 2014)
  • What I Saw in Ferguson (August 14, 2014)
  • Between the World and Ferguson (August 26, 2014)
  • The Path Cleared by Amiri Baraka (January 15, 2015)
  • David Carr, 1956-2015 (February 13, 2015)
  • Black Like Her (June 15, 2015)
  • Terrorism in Charleston (June 29, 2015)
  • Last Battles (July 6 and 13, 2015)
  • Class Notes (August 31, 2015)
  • II. Winter in America
  • The Matter of Black Lives (March 14, 2016)
  • Donald Trump and the Death of American Exceptionalism (November 4, 2016)
  • Barack Obama in Defeat (November 10, 2016)
  • Gwen Ifill, 1955-2016 (November 15, 2016)
  • Liberals Invoke States' Rights (November 28, 2016)
  • Taking It to the Streets (January 9, 2017)
  • Prodigy of Hate (February 6, 2017)
  • Ben Carson, Donald Trump, and the Misuse of American History (March 6, 2017)
  • The Battle Over Confederate Monuments in New Orleans (March 12, 2017)
  • Charlottesville and the Trouble with Civil War Hypotheticals (August 16, 2017)
  • From Louis Armstrong to the NFL: Ungrateful as the New Uppity (September 24, 2017)
  • Harvey Weinstein, Bill Cosby, and the Cloak of Charity (October 14, 2017)
  • Hard Tests (January 8, 2018)
  • Black Panther and the Indention of "Africa" (February 18, 2018)
  • The Southern Strategist (May 14, 2018)
  • From Charleston to Pittsburgh, an Arc of Premeditated American Tragedy (November 1, 2018)
  • The New Zealand Shooting and the Great-Man Theory of Misery (March 20, 2019)
  • How the Trail of American White Supremacy Led to El Paso (August 6, 2019)
  • Stacey Abrams's Fight for a Fair Vote (August 19, 2019)
  • Back to School Reform (September 8, 2019)
  • How Robert Frank's Photographs Helped Define America (September 11, 2019)
  • What Elijah Cummings Meant to Baltimore (October 18, 2019)
  • The Powerful Perspective of Queen & Slim (November 27, 2019)
  • III. History Lessens
  • D-Nice's Club Quarantine Is What You Need (March 22, 2020)
  • American Spring (June 22, 2020)
  • The Essential and Enduring Strength of John Lewis (July 18, 2020)
  • What Black History Should Already Have Taught Us (November 5, 2020)
  • Why Impeachment Doesn't Work (February 22, 2021)
  • Shaka King Grapples with Hollywood and History (February 25, 2021)
  • How Parties Die (March 15, 2021)
  • The Free State of George Floyd (July 12 and 19, 2021)
  • The Man Behind Critical Race Theory (September 20, 2021)
  • The Power of Dave Chappelle's Comedy (October 24, 2021)
  • Why I Quit Elon Musk's Twitter (November 27, 2022)
  • Hip-Hop at Fifty: An Elegy (March 16, 2023)
  • Unpardonable (September 3, 2023)
  • Black Lives Cost (2023)
  • 2016 and 2024 (November 7, 2024)
  • Epilogue
  • Acknowledgments
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

New Yorker staff writer Cobb (The Matter of Black Lives) offers an expansive collection of his published essays, spanning from 17-year-old Trayvon Martin's murder in 2012, which "ruined the mood of a nation that had, just a few years earlier, elected its first black president," to Donald Trump's return to office in 2025. The volume includes political reportage, thoughtful cultural criticism of the films Black Panther and Django Unchained, and obituaries and profiles of figures like civil rights icon John Lewis and "black America's Attorney General" Benjamin Crump, a lawyer known for representing the families of Black men slain by the police. The collection's through line is Cobb's sharp exploration of how America's history of white supremacy continues to influence contemporary events. This is most poignant in the author's on the ground coverage of numerous police killings of unarmed Black civilians and the mass shootings at Charleston's Emanuel AME Church and Pittsburgh's Tree of Life synagogue. Cobb provides incisive historical context to these events, like "the 184 recorded lynchings" in South Carolina's history, that prove they are not tragic outliers but "part of an enduring narrative." The book also serves as a real-time record of the growing reactionary backlash to Obama's presidency and the emergence of Trumpism. It's both an illuminating time capsule and an insightful analysis of how the country's history shapes its present. (Oct.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Incisive reportage on Black life and history by the noted journalist. Dean of journalism at Columbia, Cobb has a pronounced contrarian bent: He refuses, for one, to capitalize "Black," writing, "Our existence as a community need not be premised on the canards of charlatans seeking to justify murder and slavery. The bonds of shared history and culture will suffice. In short, black people exist; Black people need not." For another, he takes a pin to many a thought balloon, as in the idea that Barack Obama represented a post-racial America, noting archly, "Unlike the maligned mulattoes of old, Obama wasn't passing for white---he was passing for mixed." A case in point is Rodney King, savagely beaten by Los Angeles cops; days of rioting followed, police reforms were promised, but in the end nothing substantial changed. Cobb visits various points in American history, more often than not to find them wanting: His assessment of Abraham Lincoln, for instance, squares with historical critics who "undercut the inane idea that the formerly enslaved owed him anything at all, even a thank-you, for his self-interested decision to end a practice that the nation should never have begun in the first place." The touchstones continue: Colin Kaepernick may have been brave for protesting system violence against Blacks, but he still wanted to play football in a league complicit in that oppression; the 2018 electoral campaign pitting Stacey Abrams against Brian Kemp, marked by extreme voter suppression, is proof by his lights that "most elections are framed as a referendum on the future; Georgia's race was about how much of the past had been dragged into the present." Cobb's remarks on the intertwining of journalism and history are invaluable, while his account of inequalities of health care and its list of victims within the Black cultural community is harrowing. Provocative, arguable, written with both bravado and great care: an exemplary collection. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.