Black History Month Reading and Viewing Recommendations
Black History Month Reading and Viewing Recommendations
February is Black History Month, a time to reflect on the struggles and achievements of Black Americans, and their centrality to U.S. history. We asked several faculty and staff members for reading and viewing recommendations that explore race, identity, history, and memory. The recommendations range from the personal narrative of a daughter of the South to the story of a Pennsylvania community shared by Black and Jewish residents in the 1920s.
By Imani Perry, Harper Collins (2022)
鈥淧erry鈥檚 presence as a preeminent scholar of African American studies at Princeton is well known, but South to America weaves a personal narrative of her lived experiences both past and present as a daughter of the South (Alabama). The book, a recipient of the National Book Award for nonfiction, recasts historical events state to state and juxtaposes the local culture, language, food, and even music with what we commonly associate as American. I loved this book because Perry served as an expert tour guide reframing the way I viewed the South and Black folks鈥 place in it. Her sharp prose is contemplative and had me reexamining my life experiences as a native northerner, southern transplant, and beneficiary of the groundwork my southern ancestors laid for me to resume advancing.鈥
鈥擟hris Burke, executive director, Community Relations
Hulu miniseries, released in 2023.
鈥淭his is a miniseries presented by Nikole Hannah-Jones, the Knight Chair in Race and Journalism at Howard University and award-winning journalist who penned a book and the New York Times Magazine鈥檚 project (both with the same name). The series is not only deeply informative, but it also offers a beautiful weaving of storytelling and images about the history of the United States. Each episode explores aspects of American culture and life through topics such as democracy, capitalism, music, and fear. Through Hannah-Jones鈥 exquisite capacity to interview in humanizing and pointed ways, this six-episode series offers insight into how African Americans have contributed to American values and culture.鈥
鈥擳iffany D. Johnson, associate professor, Organizational Behavior, Scheller College of Business
Feature film released in 2023, available on Prime Video.
鈥淎.V. Rockwell鈥檚 directorial feature-length debut is a defiant love song to a gentrifying Harlem in the Giuliani-Bloomberg decade. Strength and terror coexist in Teyana Taylor鈥檚 Inez, a mother whose love for son Terry (exquisitely portrayed, chronologically, by Aaron Kingsley Adetola, Aven Courtney, and Josiah Cross) saves them both, buoyed by their villages of care. Taylor鈥檚 talent as musician-choreographer-actor shines in this complex, teetering dance about parenting, loving, and living in a New York that may erect 鈥榓 thousand and one鈥 roadblocks to building a home, but (in doubling as the family鈥檚 address) reminds viewers that home endures, always, in who and how we love.鈥
鈥擭ihad Farooq, associate professor, School of Literature, Media, and Communication
By James McBride, Penguin Random House (2023)
鈥淢cBride won the National Book Award for this work for good reason 鈥 and if you start with Heaven and Earth and let it lead to you to the rest of his jaw-dropping oeuvre then you鈥檒l be well rewarded. The story is set in the 1920s in a community in Pennsylvania shared, ambivalently, by Pottstown鈥檚 Black and Jewish residents. The tale 鈥 about physical and intangible resources, illnesses of the body and the spirit, and homeplaces both real and imagined 鈥 is rendered so carefully and delicately that by the time you are done, your attachment to Nate, Addie, Moshe, Chona, and especially their shared adoptive son, Dodo, is so deep that you simply reopen the novel and begin again.鈥
鈥擱uthie Yow, associate director, Center for Sustainable Communities Research and Education, Brook Byers Institute for Sustainable Systems
Feature film released in 2016, available on Hulu, Disney+, Prime Video, and Apple TV.
鈥淭he film recounts the true story of Katherine G. Johnson, Dorothy Vaughn, and Mary Jackson 鈥 three brilliant Black mathematicians working at NASA during the space race in the early 1960s. These American heroes had to fight segregation in an industry designed to silence them. Their resilience and endurance helped save the space program and the life of astronaut John Glenn.鈥
鈥擩oi Alexander, director, Wellness Empowerment Center, Student Engagement and Well-Being