RESILIENT RESISTANCE

2003 Gustavus Myers Outstanding Book Award Winners


December 11th, 2003

Myers Center LogoMyers Center LogoStriking images of dignity and human rights by internationally acclaimed graphic artist Chaz Maviyane-Davies provided the backdrop for the announcement of the 19th annual Gustavus Myers Outstanding Book Awards on December 11, 2003 at Simmons College in Boston at 5pm. The theme of this annual observance of the United Nations Human Rights Declaration spoke of creative resistance to all that oppresses. A Zimbabwean national, Maviyane-Davies is a Visiting Professor at Mass College of Art and recipient of numerous international commissions and design awards.

The Gustavus Myers Center for the Study of Bigotry and Human Rights welcomed a dozen books and authors into the prestigious Myers Outstanding Book Awards Winners' Circle that speak to creative resistance and to possibilities for social change.

"Our reviewers across the country value the various approaches of the authors - different formats and focus, yet multiple nuances of power arrayed against some to the benefit of others," said Dr. Loretta J. Williams, director of the Myers Center. "We chose books that provided new information, in-depth approaches that challenge ways of thinking and acting." She thanked the review panel for approaching their task with thoroughness in their search for writers whose work might add insights into dismantling the various forms on oppression in today's society. "We thank and congratulate each and all: reviewers, authors and 'we-the-people' readers!"

2003 Honorable Mention List Photos from the 2003 Reception

Dr. Williams, joined by Simmons College President Dan Cheever, announced the following Awards to:


Eyes Off the Prize

Carol AndersonCarol Anderson,
Eyes Off the Prize: The United Nations and the African American Struggle for Human Rights, 1944-1955
(Cambridge University Press 2003)

Using archival collections of correspondence, memos, editorials, documents and the like, Carol Anderson presents an insightful look at how United Nations member states, particularly the United States, approached the issue of human rights fifty years ago. Today sanitized memory holds that Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt and the U.S. government championed a strong Human Rights Commission against all odds. Not so. The resistance of U.S. elites to putting teeth behind what we now know as the United Nations Declaration of Human Rights stemmed from the domestic politics of white supremacy intertwined with Cold War anti-communism. Anderson details efforts of NAACP and other leftist organizational leaders to have the United Nations investigate segregation and lynchings in the U.S. More successful were the actions by white pro-segregation Southerners.


Rights of Inclusion

Frank MungerDavid M. EngelDavid M. Engel and Frank W. Munger,
Rights of Inclusion: Law and Identity in the Life Stories of Americans with Disabilities
(University of Chicago Press 2003)

The authors saw the 1990 passage, and subsequent implementation, of the Americans with Disabilities Act as a serendipitous opportunity to look at how rights get extended to those who are the subject of new civil rights legislation. Their question: what is the real pay-out for beneficiaries/"protected classes"? As Engel and Munger sharpened their understandings of realities for persons with disabilities, they focused on two subgroups: persons with learning disabilities and persons using a wheelchair. They switched from looking only at employment rights to highlighting narratives of personal and daily lived experiences of sixty persons. Engel and Munger incisively show how rights and identity affect one another over time, and how that interaction ultimately determines the success of laws such as the ADA. Rights of Inclusion is a good reminder that while laws on the books do not automatically mean better qualify of life for those with "new" legal rights, the rights do become activated in many ways other than when explicitly invoked in litigation.


Subversive Southerner: Anne Braden

Catherine FoslCatherine Fosl,
Subversive Southerner: Anne Braden and the Struggle for Racial Justice in the Cold War South
(Palgrave Macmillan 2002)

This social history is more than the life thus far of a living white antiracist activist who continues to "walk the talk" of racial justice. It is the story of the particular impact of the Cold War on the U.S. South and of how anticommunist witch hunts successfully diverted attention away from entrenched white supremacy. In chronicling Anne Braden's evolution from privileged southern white youth to committed activist for racial and economic justice, Fosl tells of alliances that could, and did, chip away at segregated structures and life styles. The reader learns of progressive southern reform movements of the 30s through the early 60s, and of the anti-communist vigilante attempts to silence Anne and Carl Braden. They became pariahs to some, and heroes to others, when they purchased a home in a white neighborhood for an African American couple in the 1950s. Subversive Southerner provides a window into perseverance and integrity in the face of hostile social forces. Those today overwhelmed by the political mobilizing of resentment and the domestic surveillance apparatus can learn much about resiliency from this award-winning social history.


Prison Nation

Paul WrightTara HerivelTara Herivel and Paul Wright, Editors,
Prison Nation: The Warehousing of America's Poor
(Routledge 2003)

This Myers Award recognizes the substantive contributions of a bevy of writers. Tara Herivel, a Washington State attorney, collaborated with Paul Wright, the editor of the independent monthly magazine Prison Legal News, in selecting articles on various aspects of the prison industry. Wright is currently incarcerated, and will be released this December after serving thirteen years in a Washington State prison. Most entries are prisoner-written; progressive analysts outside write others. Insiders to the criminal justice system such as Stephen Bright, Southern Center for Human Rights, for example, discuss how the system devalues good defense work, and how judges assign cases to attorneys who are the least competent and the most likely to quickly plead out their clients. The topics of articles range from lack of effective legal representation to the impact of prisons on communities; from poor medical care for prisoners and other abuses committed by prison staff to general societal stigmatization of the poor as "superfluous people." Prison Nation is a call to the well-intentioned citizen to become more fully aware and active in posing alternatives to the prison industrial complex.


Lessons from Turtle Island

Sally MoomawGuy JonesGuy Jones and Sally Moomaw,
Lessons From Turtle Island: Native Curriculum in Early Childhood Classrooms
(Redleaf Press 2002)

The authors offer multicultural and cross-cultural suggestions for early childhood educators, including parents, around five related themes: children, home, families, community and environment. The book speaks to how children learn, and how many well-meaning mainstream teachers use Native culture (if at all) in insensitive, culturally offensive and ahistorical ways that have negative consequences. The authors encourage teachers and parents to learn more about cultural traditions and artifacts before incorporating them into project activities. Jones and Moomaw, drawing upon personal experience, careful scholarship, and substantive knowledge of the classroom, advocate appropriately integrating Native and multicultural issues into all classroom activities: math, reading, writing, science, dramatic play, and art. Lessons From Turtle Island, written in nonjudgmental and accessible prose, includes activities, guidelines and resource lists for helping young children move away from stereotypical portrayals of indigenous people in mainstream culture.


The Interpreter

Suki KimSuki Kim,
The Interpreter: A Novel
(Farrar, Straus, Giroux 2003)

This deftly captivating and unsettling novel centers around a twenty-nine year old Korean American translator for the New York City court system. There are no "speeches" in this novel, yet we come to know much about the immigrant experience, and about the role that the INS (Immigration and Naturalization Service) plays in this. Suki Kim's first novel provides mystery, intrigue, self-deprecating drama, dysfunctional family dynamics, cross-racial relations and more in her exploration of the intricacies of cultural and linguistic translation. As one reviewer noted, "Suki Kim fractures the image of the happy Asian immigrant and reassembles it shard by compelling shard." Born and raised in South Korea, Kim came herself to New York at the age of thirteen and knows well the complexities of walking the line between cultures.


Troubling Education: Queer Activism and Anti-oppressive Pedagogy

Kevin KumashiroKevin K. Kumashiro,
Troubling Education: Queer Activism and Anti-oppressive Pedagogy
(RoutledgeFalmer 2002)

Many threads run concurrently through Troubling Education: educational theories, radical pedagogy, postmodern identity, queer theory, queer activism, mentoring and more. Kumashiro is committed to empowering educators to more confidently introduce, and sustain, anti-oppressive techniques and strategies in the classroom that help students challenge multiple oppressions. This innovative analysis highlights the negotiations that must be made in resistance work geared for social change. At this time of "No Child Left Behind" hype, Kumashiro's advocacy perspectives have great value in jogging us from mental ruts into alternative possibilities. The accessible way by which the author lays out stories of activists, and raises questions for reflection, is admirable.


Reaching for the Sun

Trish Marx and Cindy KarpTrish Marx and Cindy Karp,
Reaching for the Sun: Kids in Cuba
(Millbrook Press 2003)

Written for young readers, Reaching for the Sun tells the story of a children's theater group in Cuba inviting a children's creative arts group from Los Angeles to collaborate in writing and performing a play at the National Theater of Cuba. The youth from the United States spent one month in Cuba in 2001 living together with Cuban roommates in a dormitory. In the process of creating, rehearsing and performing, the youth talked about differences and similarities in their countries, personal and family experiences, and dreams and pathways forward. Photographs and brief narratives tell some of the history of Cuba and of the USA, and of young people learning perseverance and accomplishment through cross-national interchange.


Ella Baker and the Black Freedom Movement

Barbara RansbyBarbara Ransby,
Ella Baker and the Black Freedom Movement: A Radical Democratic Vision
(University of North Carolina Press 2002)

This biography of a twentieth century stalwart, an eclectic radical, speaks of a lifetime of involvement in social movements for racial and economic justice such as cooperatives, the NAACP, SCLC, SNCC and more. Ransby displays the best of the academic's ability to dig out all kinds of buried information as well as perspective on the nuances of the elusive thing we tend to call "the movement." Ella Baker's faith in people, and her ability to mentor others into their own power as activists, is inspiring for all. She was a feminist-before-the-word-came-into-use, a non-sectarian internationalist, and a staunch proponent of the power and efficacy of ordinary grassroots people. Ransby's narrative demonstrates over and over again how effective Ella Baker was in working with a variety of people, and helping to diminish the divisive tendencies in various generations struggling at the grassroots level of change.


The Democracy Owners' Manual

Jim ShultzJim Shultz,
The Democracy Owner's Manual: A Practical Guide to Changing the World
(Rutgers University Press 2002)

This book speaks to what is required of citizens in order to develop and maintain a true democracy. It is recommended for the bookshelf of every social change organization. The first portion focuses on the job of governments and the rules and mechanisms that can help or hinder the balancing of public policies to maximize the rights of all. The author exposes some of the contradictions within the U.S. democratic processes along the way. The second part moves from strategy to research to analysis to organizing to building coalitions to working with media, thus providing a primer on social change organizing and advocacy activities such as how to identify objectives, targets, allies, audiences and more. Real-life examples of how to influence government are woven in throughout this section as well as practical tips and resources. Shultz, a native Californian and civic activist for the past three decades, moved the Democracy Center to Cochabamba, Bolivia, in 1998.


When Race Becomes Real

Bernestine SingleyBernestine Singley et al,
When Race Becomes Real: Black and White Writers Confront Their Personal History
(Lawrence Hill 2002)

Reading this collection of essays is an illuminating and painful experience. A notable cast of thirty writers, African-descent and white, were invited by Singley to "drop arm's-length objectivity" and share reflections on the nuances of race from a candidly personal point of view. Commentaries from Natalie Angier, David Bradley, Robert Coles, Julianne Malveaux, Les Payne, Kalamu ya Salaam, Singley, Patricia J. Williams, Tim Wise and other writers, newspaper columnists, and activists are honest and provocative in talking about their experiences with racism and the other side of the coin: white privilege. Wisdom, wit and pain combine as they address the daily injuries of judgments about race. Columnist Leonard Pitts, Jr., describes an incident of discrimination, for example: "I had been at this crossroad so many times before. You move beyond it, you think...and then you look up and you're right there at the same ugly intersection of bigotry and fear. It wears on you. It tears you down." The racial dynamics of the twenty-first century - how racism and privilege are negotiated, challenged or ignored -- are very real in their consequences. Singley and the assembled writers provide an excellent resource for book group discussion and honest talk about race.


Race in the College Classroom

Maureen ReddyBonnie TuSmithBonnie TuSmith and Maureen Reddy, et al,
Race in the College Classroom: Pedagogy and Politics
(Rutgers University Press 2002)

The focus here is upon what happens in the college classroom as seen through the perspectives of those who are teaching. Readers listen in on candid commentaries from persons of various racial and ethnic backgrounds teaching a wide spectrum of courses in a variety of colleges and universities. Seasoned and new teachers cut through the valorized "ivy tower" mythology of academe. The refreshingly honest essays combine to portray the wider political context in today's society that is reflected in the inertia, hypocrisy and silencings in higher education that allow assumptions about "whiteness as rightness" to continue to replicate among many students, administrators and leaders. Race in the College Classroom is essential reading for all in higher education, and all who care about working to dismantle the monocultural whiteness at multiple levels that devalues those who openly embody, and/or talk about, racial justice in their classrooms.


The Gustavus Myers Center for the Study of Bigotry and Human Rights was established in 1984. Its hub office has been housed at Simmons College since 2002.

For additional information on the authors and contents of the books, or for contact information for the authors, contact lorewill@myerscenter.org, or call 617-521-2171.

Co-sponsors of the book awards are American Friends Service Committee, Center for Democratic Renewal, Fellowship of reconciliation, National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, National Conference for Community and Justice; National Urban League, PFLAG (Parents, Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays), Political Research Associates, Poverty & Race Research Action Council, Unitarian Universalist Association, United Church of Christ, and individual and institutional donors.

The Myers reviewers give and gain much as they go about their work over the year -
thank you, thank you, thank you, reviewers!!!

Congratulations to each of the authors for their joining the Myers Circle of Winners! Thank you for stimulating in readers expanded ways that we can effectively work for social justice today.


Gustavus Myers Center for the Study of Bigotry and Human Rights
Loretta J. Williams, Ph.D., Director
Simmons College
300 The Fenway
Boston, Massachusetts 02115
617-521-2171
lorewill@myerscenter.org

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