Historian Martha S. Jones found a remarkable and complicated story of identity, race and belonging as she researched her own ...
This collection of papers from the 2012 Arts & Letters Conference, hosted by the University of North Georgia, explores how color can provide clues to the interpretation of history and politics, works ...
More than a third of books banned last year featured fictional characters or real person of color, a new analysis from PEN America shows.
Supported by By Amanda Fortini “SUPPOSE I WERE to begin by saying that I had fallen in love with a color,” reads the first line of Maggie Nelson’s “Bluets,” her 2009 book-length lyric ...
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