Bridgett M. Davis's Blog, page 2
December 13, 2014
Millions March NYC - 12/13/14. Black lives matter. (at...

Millions March NYC - 12/13/14. Black lives matter. (at Washington Square Park)
marcia-e-wilson:
Ringshout and Mosaic Magazine hosted authors...





Ringshout and Mosaic Magazine hosted authors Bridgett Davis and Jeffery Renard Allen reading and signing at Greenlight Books. Fort Greene, Brooklyn, NY
Such a wonderful evening.
November 5, 2014
Thank you to the wonderful women of Enoch Pratt. That was...

Thank you to the wonderful women of Enoch Pratt. That was awesome. (at Enoch Pratt Free Library)
October 27, 2014
Of all the wonderful reviews that INTO THE GO-SLOW has received,...

Of all the wonderful reviews that INTO THE GO-SLOW has received, so far this one means the most to me. A brilliant young Nigerian critic & scholar says I got it right. #happydance
October 26, 2014
intersectionalfeminism:
Bringing these back because it’s that...
Ebola, race and fear
Two students from Rwanda, 2,600 miles (4,148km) from West Africa, are sent home from a New Jersey elementary school for 21 days. A Maine high school teacher is given three weeks off because she attended a convention in Dallas, Texas.
A Texas college sends out letters to prospective students from disease-free Nigeria informing them that they are no longer accepting applications from countries with “confirmed Ebola cases”. A Pennsylvania high school football player is met by chants of “Ebola” from the opposing team. A middle school principal goes to a funeral in Zambia, also with no cases of Ebola, and is put on paid administrative leave for a week.
Some writers think they’ve found a theme that energises these fears, tying many of these incidents together: racism.
"In both the United States and Europe, Ebola is increasing racial profiling and reviving imagery of the ‘Dark Continent’," writes Robin Wright, a fellow at the Woodrow Wilson International Center, for CNN. “The disease is persistently portrayed as West African, or African, or from countries in a part of the world that is racially black, even though nothing medically differentiates the vulnerability of any race to Ebola.”
And as the disease is associated with blacks, she says, it contributes to and feeds off already existing racism in Western society.
Of course.
Autumn in New England. Lovin’ it.

Autumn in New England. Lovin’ it.
October 24, 2014
Thanks Porter Square Books. Nothing like a Cambridge crowd! (at...

Thanks Porter Square Books. Nothing like a Cambridge crowd! (at Porter Square Books)
October 21, 2014
Besties in 7th grade @ Hampton Jr. High. Friendship endures!...

Besties in 7th grade @ Hampton Jr. High. Friendship endures! #bestbooktourever (at Detroit, Michgan)