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JULY 2023
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Three questions with...
2021 FELLOW EVE L. EWING
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Your Fellows project will be a book, Original Sins: The (Mis)education of Black and Native Children and the Construction of American Racism, in which you examine how the American school system has been instrumental in solidifying racial oppression. What was the impetus for writing this book now?
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This book is based on teaching I’ve been doing for about eight years. I begin all of my classes on race, schools, and education policy by talking about the particular histories of Black and Indigenous peoples and the ways schools have represented, paradoxically, both tremendous freedom and liberation as well as tremendous harm and violence. I tell my students that you can’t really understand schools in this country without understanding that first. Eventually I got tired of pulling together disparate sources and texts to have that conversation and thought I might try to write a book that brings these intertwined histories together in a way that I hope will speak to educators, students, parents and families, and anybody who cares about schools.
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You recently started writing a new run of the Black Panther comic for Marvel. What does it mean for you to take over this character, and what do you think is unique that you bring to the telling of T’Challa’s story?
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It’s a tremendous honor for me and I’m so humbled to have been asked. Comics is a funny arena because a lot of people who read my other work still don’t find it to be a respectable or serious form of literary effort, or just kind of don’t get it, but for folks in this world it’s a huge deal and it’s in many ways the largest spotlight I’ve ever had on my work in terms of its salience for popular culture. The comics industry, especially in terms of the Big Two (DC and Marvel) and superhero comics, still has a long ways to go in terms of having creators at the helm who represent the diversity of our world, and so it’s also a space where there’s a lot of racism and misogyny. So amidst all that, I’m just trying to keep my head down and tell the most interesting and engaging stories I can about a beloved icon. “Unique” is a tough bar for a character who’s been around for 60 years, but I’m
striving to just do the best job I can.
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Along with your work as an author, artist, and educator, you are also a cultural organizer in the Chicago area. How does community organizing influence your written work?
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Social transformation is a team effort, and I come from a tradition of thought–Black feminist thought, and the particular organizing landscape of Chicago–that is about the maxim of “get in where you fit in.” I am always trying to pay attention to who is doing what, who is building networks of care and shoring up new relationships and fighting new battles or old battles in new ways, and asking myself if there is a small way I can show up to help build something good and sustainable. As a writer, that can mean using the power of narrative to shift the conversation around something–which I tried to do with Ghosts in the Schoolyard, with my piece in Vanity Fair about police unions, or with this new podcast Guaranteed which is about people receiving direct cash transfers. But as a person, a community member, and as a neighbor, it sometimes just means showing up, moving chairs around, serving food, making a donation, stuff like that. I try to keep those really basic forms of care at the center of my practice.
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We asked Fellows what small changes in their routine have made them more productive, more authentic, or otherwise stronger in their work.
1: A few minutes of mindfulness before sitting at my desk.
— Melissa Segura, Class of 2019
2: I try to start my writing morning by reading poetry—it expands possibilities for form before I get too stuck in my ways.
— Khameer Kidia, Class of 2023
3: Accepting that nothing I write after 6pm will make any sense so there's no point in forcing myself! — Mona Chalabi, Class of 2023
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Monica Potts' The Forgotten Girls was featured in a New York Times Op-Ed about the struggles of American women and girls. Potts also was interviewed on Slate's Political Gabfest podcast about her book.
Jonathan Katz's book Gangsters of Capitalism was featured in a recent episode of the Déjà News podcast with Rachel Maddow. The book was also named a finalist in The Library of Virginia's People's Choice Awards.
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The top 3 New America events we recommend you check out. Now.
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JUL 18TH
From Enrollment to College Completion
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Join the Education Policy Program for two panel discussions with affirmative action experts and students. Learn more
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JUL 30TH
When Innocence is Not Enough x The Alley Podcast
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Join author Thomas L. Dybdahl, New America podcast producer Shannon Lynch, and award-winning journalist Patrice Gaines to discuss the 1984 DC murder case of Catherine Fuller and the ensuing convictions of eight young Black men. Learn more
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AUG 22ND
The Death of Public School
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Join the Fellows and Education Policy Programs for a conversation with Cara Fitzpatrick, Class of 2019, about her new book. Learn more
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Trust just won the Pulitzer for fiction, it’s blowing me away.
— Clint Smith,
Class of 2020
Learn More
Though I've only just started it, this book already contains some of the most beautiful, immersive, emotionally precise prose I've ever read, all in a conversational voice that flows like butter.
— Albert Samaha,
Class of 2023
Learn More
It's beautiful, concise, and psychologically complex.
— Matthew Davis,
Class of 2017
Learn More
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Fill out the form below for a chance to win a copy of The Forgotten Girls by Monica Potts, Class of 2016.
Please submit by Monday, July 17th to be considered.
Get swag!
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