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Black Skinhead: Reflections on Blackness and Our Political Future

par Brandi Collins-Dexter

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"For fans of Bad Feminist and The Sum of Us, Black Skinhead sparks a radical conversation about Black America and political identity. In Black Skinhead, Brandi Collins-Dexter, former Senior Campaign Manager for Color Of Change, explores the fragile alliance between Black voters and the Democratic party. Through sharp, timely essays that span the political, cultural, and personal, Collins-Dexter reveals decades of simmering disaffection in Black America, told as much through voter statistics as it is through music, film, sports, and the baffling mind of Kanye West. While Black Skinhead is an outward look at Black votership and electoral politics, it is also a funny, deeply personal, and introspective look at the fragility of Black culture and identity, ultimately revealing a Black America that has become deeply disillusioned with the failed promises of its country. We had been told that everything was fine, that America was working for everyone and that the American Dream was attainable for all. But for those who had been paying attention, there had been warning signs that the Obamas' version of the American Dream wasn't working for everyone. That it hadn't been working for many white Americans was immediately and loudly discussed, but the truth-and what I set out to write this book about-was that it hadn't been working for many Black Americans either. For many, Obama's vision had been more illusion than reality all along. When someone tells you everything is fine, but around you, you see evidence that it's not, where will the quest to find answers lead you? As I went on the journey of writing this book, I found a very different tale about Black politics and Black America, one that countered white America's long-held assumption that Black voters will always vote Democrat-and even that the Democratic party is the best bet for Black Americans. My ultimate question was this: how are Black people being led away-not towards-each other, and what do we lose when we lose each other? What do we lose when, to quote Kanye West, we feel lost in the world"--… (plus d'informations)
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nonfiction - analysis from interviews with over 40 individual Black people on political ideology, with a focus on those that are becoming more disillusioned with the Democratic party after it's become clear that their votes are taken for granted and their interests are ignored, as well as the author's own experiences and feelings about her own political identity, the passing of her late father, and thoughts on inherited trauma.

Really interesting, not to mention critically important. A slower read; takes some time to digest all the information, but picks up a little after the second chapter or so; the author also injects a good amount of her own humor on what otherwise would be a pretty serious book. I didn't find her anecdotal story to be convincing proof of inherited trauma (depression doesn't always result from external factors, I think it is sometimes literally just a chemical imbalance) but other authors (possibly Jesmyn Ward's Men We Reaped, Johnnie Christmas' Swim Team touches on it a little, definitely Caleb Gayle's We Refuse to Forget, to name just a few works worth reading)

Recommended. ( )
  reader1009 | Oct 17, 2022 |
Black Skinhead, by Brandi Collins-Dexter, is a refreshing and honest attempt to both understand and project into the future the variety of Black political thought.

There is a tendency among white political pundits to conflate the monolithic voting habits of the Black community with Black political thought and ideas. The Democratic party has largely taken this for granted and, without living up to most of their promises, assumed the votes would still be there. This complacency, to put it nicely, has made many voters choose to simply not vote while others feel more aligned with the GOP. In large part, seeing a number of Black Trump supporters led Collins-Dexter to delve into exactly why. What she discovered actually made sense even if it was still bothersome.

The ideas and concerns of the majority of voters she spoke with were very similar, it was what they were going to do about it that illustrates the fractured (fracturing?) state of Black community. Using popular culture, from music to professional wrestling (no, really! and it works!), we see how where there used to be debate and conflict but ultimately a coming together for the common good there is now the same siloing of people into their own worlds. Without the same type of community, across class and income levels, the common good that a community could agree on becomes many often-oppositional ideas of good. Most individuals are still thinking of the good of the Black community but without actual places (physical or virtual) where different viewpoints can be contested, a consensus can't be reached. Thus the shattering vision of a group of excited MAGA hat wearing young Black people.

My attempt at summarizing is likely lacking in nuance, but the book does a much better job. Don't hold my poor wording against the book.

I was especially intrigued by her analyses of popular culture. I personally think her assessment of what Kanye West "meant" by a couple of his comments is giving a little more credit to him than he deserves. I think he may have had a vague notion of what she fleshes out, but how she interprets it is where the real power comes from. I also found her explanation and contextualizing of drill music to be eye-opening. I was barely aware of it and had no context previously, so this was all new to me.

Her personal stories, especially those involving her father, really helped to make this a phenomenal work. Weaving the personal and the political, the local and the national, even the rural and the urban (and suburban). I want to come back to this book again in a couple months of letting the ideas ferment and see what my new takeaways will be.

Reviewed from a copy made available by the publisher via NetGalley. ( )
  pomo58 | Sep 7, 2022 |
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...Black identity and culture are by no means tethered to the Democratic Party. And the uneasy alliance between Black voters and the Democratic Party can and will be broken, especially if Black voters become increasingly disillusioned with a party they feel is taking them for granted. If you had told a Black person in 1922 that by the mid-1980s more than 90 percent of Black voters would support only Democratic Party candidates, they wouldn't have believed you. It was unthinkable to imagine so many Black people leaving the party of Lincoln. But there were people who were alive during the Civil War still walking the earth when the Black vote began to make significant shifts to the other side.
Right now, it's hard for me to imagine a scenario in which 90 percent of Black people are voting Republican by 2084. But the thing is, the Republican party doesn't need 90 percent of the Black vote to control everything. If they could climb up into the mid-20s percentage-wise then that alone would have a huge impact...which is a possibility that feels very much within reach. (p 26)
A study released in 2019 by Gen Forward, a University of Chicago-based polling initiative, found that 1 in 3 Black voters between the ages of 18 and 36 said that they believed the Democratic Party does not care about them. A survey of more than 30,000 self-identified Black Americans, conducted by Black Futures Lab, found that 1 in 5 respondents viewed the Democratic Party unfavorably, and 52 percent of respondents said that "politicians do not care about Black people or their interests." That's a lot of disgruntled potential voters the Democratic Party has to rely on to keep showing up. (p 34)
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"For fans of Bad Feminist and The Sum of Us, Black Skinhead sparks a radical conversation about Black America and political identity. In Black Skinhead, Brandi Collins-Dexter, former Senior Campaign Manager for Color Of Change, explores the fragile alliance between Black voters and the Democratic party. Through sharp, timely essays that span the political, cultural, and personal, Collins-Dexter reveals decades of simmering disaffection in Black America, told as much through voter statistics as it is through music, film, sports, and the baffling mind of Kanye West. While Black Skinhead is an outward look at Black votership and electoral politics, it is also a funny, deeply personal, and introspective look at the fragility of Black culture and identity, ultimately revealing a Black America that has become deeply disillusioned with the failed promises of its country. We had been told that everything was fine, that America was working for everyone and that the American Dream was attainable for all. But for those who had been paying attention, there had been warning signs that the Obamas' version of the American Dream wasn't working for everyone. That it hadn't been working for many white Americans was immediately and loudly discussed, but the truth-and what I set out to write this book about-was that it hadn't been working for many Black Americans either. For many, Obama's vision had been more illusion than reality all along. When someone tells you everything is fine, but around you, you see evidence that it's not, where will the quest to find answers lead you? As I went on the journey of writing this book, I found a very different tale about Black politics and Black America, one that countered white America's long-held assumption that Black voters will always vote Democrat-and even that the Democratic party is the best bet for Black Americans. My ultimate question was this: how are Black people being led away-not towards-each other, and what do we lose when we lose each other? What do we lose when, to quote Kanye West, we feel lost in the world"--

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