culture

  • 10 Pieces of Advice for Postcollege Life

    (The Root) — It’s commencement season! Over the weekend, President Obama headed to Morehouse College to deliver what turned out to be a controversial address, while first lady Michelle Obama went to Maryland’s Bowie State University to deliver a widely lauded speech. Scandal actress Kerry Washington spoke at her alma mater, George Washington University, where…

  • How the Obama Administration Talks to Black America

    It’s hard to avoid the conclusion that this White House has one way of addressing the social ills of black people — and particularly black youths — and another way of addressing everyone else, writes Ta-Nehisi Coates at The Atlantic. No president has ever been better read on the intersection of racism and American history…

  • Celebrating Race in the Renaissance

    (The Root) — This image is part of a weekly series that The Root is presenting in conjunction with the Image of the Black in Western Art Archive at Harvard University’s W.E.B. Du Bois Institute for African and African American Research. Among the panoply of images displayed by the courtly circles of Renaissance Europe, a…

  • Enough of Nice-Nasty Christianity

    Christians should stop wielding religion as a tool of oppression, write Evette Dionne at Clutch magazine. “The Fighting Temptations” is one of the funniest, tongue-in-cheek depictions of the Pentecostal Baptist church … Though Paulina is a caricature, my then 14-year-old brain couldn’t comprehend how any Christian could be so devious and conniving. Paulina was the…

  • Wole Soyinka: Push for Nobel Prize for Achebe Is 'Obscene'

    Some in the literary world are pushing for the late Chinua Achebe to be awarded a posthumous Nobel Prize for literature, and fellow Nigerian author Wole Soyinka has had enough, The Guardian reports. He says the calls have “gone beyond ‘sickening’ ” and become “obscene and irreverent.” To be clear, it’s not that Soyinka —…

  • Justin Fairfax Gets Wash. Post Endorsement for Va. Attorney General

    Justin Fairfax, a former federal prosecutor who’s seeking the Democratic nomination for Virginia attorney general, has earned the endorsement of the Washington Post in his race against Mark R. Herring. The 34-year-old Fairfax, a Washington, D.C., native and graduate of Duke University and Columbia Law School, is one to watch. Here’s why the Post is…

  • South African Whites Question Their Future

    In South Africa, apartheid has been over for two decades. So it’s really no surprise that being white in the country feels different now from the way it did under the forced system of harsh, institutionalized racial segregation that curtailed the rights of black residents in favor or the ruling Afrikaaner population. As the BBC‘s…

  • Va. Lt. Gov Candidate's Questionable Views

    Minister and lawyer E.W. Jackson won the GOP nomination for Virginia lieutenant governor on Saturday. The development has inspired some to take a new look at his strong — and, some would say, outrageous — views on everything from President Obama’s “Muslim sensibilities” to a KKK-and-Planned Parenthood comparison. New York Magazine’s Adam Martin rounded up…

  • Zoe Saldana: 'People of Color' Don't Exist

    In a piece at Clutch magazine, Evette Dionne takes Zoe Saldana to task for saying, “There’s no such thing as people of color,” and suggests that she enroll in a Critical Race Theory class. Actress Zoe Saldana has been inserting the proverbial foot in her mouth in recent weeks. The “Colombiana” starlet has been media…

  • Black Pastors to Star in Reality TV Show

    Black America Web‘s Michael H. Cottman asks in an insightful piece about an impending Oxygen Network reality show about black pastors: Should they sanctify the foolishness of reality TV? Would you really want your pastor – and your congregation – to star in a reality television show? I’m not knocking the six black pastors who…