The Burden cover art

The Burden

African Americans and the Enduring Impact of Slavery

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The Burden

By: Rochelle Riley - editor, Nikole Hannah-Jones - foreword
Narrated by: Allyson Johnson
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About this listen

The Burden, edited by award-winning Detroit newspaper columnist Rochelle Riley, is a powerful collection of essays that create a chorus of evidence that the burden is real. As Nikole Hannah-Jones states in the book's foreword, "despite the fact that Black Americans remain at the bottom of every indicator of well-being in this country - from wealth, to poverty, to health, to infant mortality, to graduation rates, to incarceration - we want to pretend that this current reality has nothing to do with the racial caste system that was legally enforced for most of the time the United States of America has existed."

The Burden expresses the voices of other well-known Americans, such as actor/director Tim Reid who compares slavery to a cancer diagnosis, former Detroit News columnist Betty DeRamus who recounts the discrimination she encountered as a young Black Detroiter in the south, and the actress Aisha Hinds who explains how slavery robbed an entire race of value and self-worth. This collection of essays is a response to the false idea that slavery wasn't so bad and something we should all just "get over".

©2018 Rochelle Riley (P)2018 HighBridge, a division of Recorded Books
African American Cultural & Regional Essays Social Sciences United States World Literature Celebrity Nonfiction Social justice Discrimination Infant Africa Critical Race Theory

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