Southbound: Essays on Identity, Inheritance, and Social Change

$26.95

A move at age ten from a Detroit suburb to Chattanooga in 1984 thrusts Anjali Enjeti into what feels like a new world replete with Confederate flags, Bible verses, and whiteness. It is here that she l

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A move at age ten from a Detroit suburb to Chattanooga in 1984 thrusts Anjali Enjeti into what feels like a new world replete with Confederate flags, Bible verses, and whiteness. It is here that she learns how to get her bearings as a mixed-race brown girl in the Deep South and begins to understand how identity can inspire, inform, and shape a commitment to activism. Her own evolution is a bumpy one, and along the way Enjeti, racially targeted as a child, must wrestle with her own complicity in white supremacy and bigotry as an adult.

The twenty essays of her debut collection, Southbound, tackle white feminism at a national feminist organization, the early years of the AIDS epidemic in the South, voter suppression, gun violence and the gun sense movement, the whitewashing of southern literature, the 1982 racialized killing of Vincent Chin, social media’s role in political accountability, evangelical Christianity’s marriage to extremism, and the rise of nationalism worldwide.

In our current era of great political strife, this timely collection by Enjeti, a journalist and organizer, paves the way for a path forward, one where identity drives coalition-building and social change.

Author: Anjali Enjeti
Binding Type: Paperback
Publisher: University of Georgia Press
Published: 04/15/2021
Series: Crux: The Georgia Literary Nonfiction
Pages: 248
Weight: 0.7lbs
Size: 8.40h x 7.70w x 0.70d
ISBN: 9780820360065
Language: English

Author

Enjeti, Anjali

Binding

ISBN10

0820360066

ISBN13

9780820360065

Page Count

248

Published Date

April 15 2021

Series

Crux: The Georgia Literary Nonfiction

Language

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