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No Justice, No Peace

From the Civil Rights Movement to Black Lives Matter

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Nautilus Book Awards' Better Books for a Better World
A Movement in Words and Images
 
Award-winning photographer Devin Allen has devoted the last six years to documenting the protests of the Black Lives Matter movement, from its early days in Baltimore, Maryland, up to the present day. The riveting images in No Justice, No Peace provide a lens on the resistance that has empowered Black lives generation after generation. Allen’s signature black-and-white photos bear witness to the profound history of African Americans and allies in the fight for social justice and portray the collective action over decades in stunning, timeless portraits.
 
Allen’s remarkable photos of today’s Black Lives Matter protests, which have been featured in the New York Times, the Washington Post, and twice on the cover of Time magazine, were inspired by Gordon Parks of the Civil Rights Movement, and create a vision of the past and future of Black activism and leadership in America. With contributions from twenty-six bestselling and influential writers and activists of today such as Clint Smith, DeRay Mckesson, D. Watkins, Jacqueline Woodson, Emmanuel Acho, Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor, and more, alongside the words of past writers and activists such as Martin Luther King Jr, Frederick Douglass, Malcolm X, Maya Angelou, and John Lewis, No Justice, No Peace is a reminder of the moral responsibility of Americans to break unjust laws and take direct action.
 
In words and pictures, No Justice, No Peace honors the connection between activism today and that of the past. If indeed hindsight is 20/20, this artistic look back is a lens on history that enlarges our understanding of the lasting predicament of racism in the United States of America. At once deeply intimate and profoundly uplifting, No Justice, No Peace is a visual tribute to Black resistance and a stern missive on the tough, but necessary, road that lies ahead.

 

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    • Kirkus

      October 15, 2022
      A photo-rich anthology of work decrying racial inequities and violence against Black Americans. Each of the pieces, many previously published elsewhere, are by a different writer. In his introduction, Baltimore-based photographer Allen, whose photos interweave with those of famed civil rights-era photographer Parks, explains his motivation for this book: "Black people in American must control our narrative. We must document the times we live in--through protest, photography, and words." Collectively, these brief pieces resonate with blistering rage, grief, and urgent appeals. DeRay Mckesson explains, "There will never be peace--not in our hearts, not in the streets--without justice for those who have paid the ultimate price of police brutality." Lawrence Burney remembers George Floyd: "It is important to share these caring snapshots because they underline that Black people are entitled to a sense of individuality, something that many white Americans (cops or otherwise) repeatedly fail to understand." Dominique Christina offers a searing poem that includes these lines: "We gon' always fight and / Be in our magic / We gon' bury our dead and / Sing what songs we know / We gon' be what you're afraid of. / We gon' be what you're afraid of." In "Uncomfortable Conversations With a Black Man," Emmanuel Acho writes, "The words we use matter, and I want to focus on four of them here: protest, riot, rebellion, and massacre. When it comes to the fight against racism in this country, an ongoing question has been who gets to decide which is which, and then how they get to enforce those decisions." The book is interspersed with quotations from Black scholars, such as Audre Lorde and Fred Hampton, and the many pages of Parks' photographs, mostly of protests, are striking. American photographer Jamel Shabazz provides the foreword, and other contributors include D. Watkins, Clint Smith, Ruby Hamad, and Jacqueline Woodson. An urgent, intense collection worth buying for the photos alone.

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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