culture

  • Will King's Dream End Without the Voting Rights Act?

    Writing at the Huffington Post, Kevin Powell argues that the Supreme Court’s decision to strike down parts of the Voting Rights Act will reverse the progress made by civil rights leaders like Martin Luther King Jr. This historic gesture now frees nine American states, mostly in the South, to change their election laws without advance…

  • Keri Hilson: 'YOLO, So Know Your Status'

    (The Root) — Keri Hilson gets tested for HIV/AIDS every six months, and she’s lending her name to a product that will allow you to do the same. “I make healthy decisions when it comes to my sex life, and I make really good decisions to lower my risk of HIV,” Hilson told The Root during a…

  • First-Generation Blacks: My Parents Are African, So Some Parts of Coming to America Was Straight Up Annoying

    (The Root) — When Coming to America premiered 25 years ago, on June 29, 1988, it was an instant classic — and the third-highest-grossing film of the year. The Eddie Murphy comedy, about a prince from a fictional African country who comes to the U.S. to find his future queen, tops plenty of fans’ funniest-movie-of-all-time…

  • Obamas Visit 'Door of No Return' in Senegal

    The Washington Post is reporting that the Obamas visited the “Door of No Return” on Senegal’s Goree Island Thursday afternoon and looked at the Atlantic Ocean from the same vantage point that African slaves once had on their way to North America. The United States’ first African American president was then joined by his wife,…

  • Watch This: Anti-Racism Lesson Goes Viral 40 Years Later

    The day after the assassination of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. in 1968, third-grade teacher Jane Elliott listened to her class in an all-white Iowa town make racist remarks about his death and decided to teach them a lesson, according to the Globe and Mail. “What I had racked my brain [for] was a…

  • Is Cursive Still Necessary?

    During Thursday’s testimony in the George Zimmerman second-degree-murder trial, the defense cross-examined Trayvon Martin’s friend Rachel Jeantel, with whom he was talking on the phone when Zimmerman shot and killed him on Feb. 26, 2012. During the cross-examination, defense attorney Don West gave Jeantel a piece of paper to read for the record. But she…

  • Paula Deen Calls the Rev. Jesse Jackson

    Civil rights leader the Rev. Jesse Jackson tells the Associated Press that he will help embattled celebrity chef Paula Deen overhaul her image after her past use of a racial slur was revealed. He tells the AP that she shouldn’t become a “sacrificial lamb” over the issue of racial intolerance. Further, he argues that if…

  • Congress, Give Us a New Voting Rights Act

    In a piece at CNN, Donna Brazile argues that it is up to President Obama to convince Congress to restore the Voting Rights Act, which has been gutted by the Supreme Court. The challenge, however, will be mustering bipartisan support in a deeply divided Congress. In an earthshaking 1965 speech to Congress and to the nation,…

  • Defense of Marriage Act: More Work to Be Done

    While supporters celebrated the Supreme Court’s decision to strike down Section 3 of the Defense of Marriage Act, the Washington Post‘s Eugene Robinson argues that there’s more work to be done. The Supreme Court’s work on marriage equality is far from done. But I believe this may be remembered as the day when the nation…

  • Black Women and HIV Rates: A Reprieve

    (The Root) — Usually, when Quinn Gentry stops talking, the women in the audience spend a few seconds sitting, shell-shocked and silent. Around Atlanta, Gentry’s speeches — rife with the nitty-gritty and completely true stories of women infected with HIV collected over the course of her research career — are the stuff of legend. In…