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Opere di Reni Eddo-Lodge

Opere correlate

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Data di nascita
1989-09-25
Sesso
female
Nazionalità
UK
Nazione (per mappa)
England, UK
Luogo di nascita
London, England, UK
Istruzione
University of Central Lancashire
Attività lavorative
journalist

Utenti

Recensioni

This book taught me a lot of things I didn't know about racism in Britain. I honestly didn't know that racism was such a big issue there, and actually assumed that it wasn't as bad as it is in America. I was completely wrong, and must salute and applaud Reni Eddo-Lodge for being such a good researcher and excellent writer. This book should be read by everyone.
 
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pianistpalm91 | 52 altre recensioni | Apr 7, 2024 |
Definitely a recommended read for anyone who’s provoked by that title (as was I)! In fact I disregarded this book just because of the title sounding divisive, discriminatory and radical.

I took to reading this book because I made a pledge to focus on books that challenged my thinking, challenged my internal confirmation bias. As a socially-liberal centrist, who often disagrees with the solutions intersectional feminism proposes - this book ticks those boxes.

I was about to give it five stars but I have a few issues with it. This book reflects the experiences of POC and other marginalized groups in the western world, and therefore the tone is rightfully frustrated and angry. However, sometimes it could be a little more neutral and more aware of it’s own generalizations. Just for the sake of establishing a more productive dialogue. Perhaps most of all I wish she would debate some of the common centrist counter arguments in an intellectually more sophisticated and nuanced way.

Anyway, read it, especially if you “disagree” with the title.
… (altro)
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tourmikes | 52 altre recensioni | Jan 3, 2024 |
I am not the target audience for this book, but I still strongly encourage everyone to read it as Eddo-Lodge addresses essential factors underpinning the structure of our society.

This year (2018 at time of writing) is exhausting and feels like it's gone on forever. I recognize part of that fatigue has been due to doing ally-adjacent work of explaining in conversations why coded language and power structures are harmful (it's unfair to put the burden of educating the unaware on people of color, but as I am a non-black POC, I feel I can be useful here). A friend was accused of "reverse racism", and their acquaintance had to gently but firmly be informed that racism is prejudice power, so it doesn't check out to accuse their one black acquaintance of it. Eddo-Lodge goes into detail with history and statistics on why this is so.

The chapter on intersectionality with feminism also struck a chord with me, as I have [white] female friends who mentioned early in the current administration that they just didn't check the news any more as it was stressful/frustrating/etc. I absolutely understand the need for relief from the firehose onslaught of, well, everything but at the same time, there are fellow citizens who cannot afford to tune out as policy changes immediately affect them.

I was caught off guard by this book being centered on British structural racism, but realized that as an American, most of my prior reading is centered on a domestic lens. There's a cool comfort in recognizing other countries have similar issues (though we arguably inherited it from the mother country before ah, making it our own). Not sure if other US readers are aware, but typically when Brits refer to Asians, they mean South Asians instead of East. The Asian diaspora includes everyone descended from Asian countries, but it's an interesting geographical linguistic distinction (and a good reminder that I and fellow east Asian Americans need to show solidarity with our brown brothers and sisters).

Societal struggle is not a zero sum game. The "take back our country" rhetoric is frustrating because the success of black and brown people does not diminish white people in the same field. It's not the job of minority folks to educate our white friends, but this book is a good start.
… (altro)
 
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Daumari | 52 altre recensioni | Dec 28, 2023 |
Great introduction to delving deeper into racism and showing just how much there is to do and how big the impact is. Definitely something that would be good for someone who's totally unfamiliar with the issue.

The one thing that was I guess at least surprising was the couple page interview with Nick Griffin. The justification seemed to be about right of reply laws, which I can't really say anything about. It was hard and weird to read his views at quite a bit of length, though.
 
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tombomp | 52 altre recensioni | Oct 31, 2023 |

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Statistiche

Opere
1
Opere correlate
3
Utenti
1,710
Popolarità
#15,009
Voto
4.2
Recensioni
53
ISBN
26
Lingue
9
Preferito da
1

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