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Aprašymas
A deeply personal exploration of the generational impact of guns on the Black experience in America
A few years ago, Trymaine Lee, though fit and only 38, almost died of a heart attack. When his then five-year-old daughter Nola asked her daddy why, he realized that in order to be honest with her, he had to confront the weight that almost killed him - the weight of being a Black man in America; the weight of bearing witness as a journalist to constant Black death; the weight of a family history that includes enslavement, lynching, the great migration, the also toxic racism of the North, and gun violence that took two of his great uncles, a grandfather, a step brother and two cousins. In this powerful narrative, Lee weaves three strands: the long, bloody history of African Americans and guns; his work as a griot of gun violence, stalking death from New Orleans to Chicago, to Charleston and Buffalo and tallying the cost and the riches generated by the gun industry, legal and illegal; and finally, his own life, from almost being caught up in gun violence as a young man to bearing witness to his ancestors Middle Passage in Ghana, to facing the challenges of representing his people accurately in a mainly white, often hostile media world, and most importantly, to celebrating the strength of his family and community. In A Thousand Ways to Die, Lee answers Nola and all that seek a more just America. He shares the truth of the Black experience, but he also celebrates the beauty and resilience that is her legacy.A deeply personal exploration of the generational impact of guns on the Black experience in America
A few years ago, Trymaine Lee, though fit and only 38, almost died of a heart attack. When his then five-year-old daughter Nola asked her daddy why, he realized that in order to be honest with her, he had to confront the weight that almost killed him - the weight of being a Black man in America; the weight of bearing witness as a journalist to constant Black death; the weight of a family history that includes enslavement, lynching, the great migration, the also toxic racism of the North, and gun violence that took two of his great uncles, a grandfather, a step brother and two cousins. In this powerful narrative, Lee weaves three strands: the long, bloody history of African Americans and guns; his work as a griot of gun violence, stalking death from New Orleans to Chicago, to Charleston and Buffalo and tallying the cost and the riches generated by the gun industry, legal and illegal; and finally, his own life, from almost being caught up in gun violence as a young man to bearing witness to his ancestors Middle Passage in Ghana, to facing the challenges of representing his people accurately in a mainly white, often hostile media world, and most importantly, to celebrating the strength of his family and community. In A Thousand Ways to Die, Lee answers Nola and all that seek a more just America. He shares the truth of the Black experience, but he also celebrates the beauty and resilience that is her legacy.
Atsiliepimai