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Louder Than the Lies: Asian American Identity, Solidarity, and Self-Love

Louder Than the Lies: Asian American Identity, Solidarity, and Self-Love in Franklin, TN

Current price: $34.99
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Louder Than the Lies: Asian American Identity, Solidarity, and Self-Love

Barnes and Noble

Louder Than the Lies: Asian American Identity, Solidarity, and Self-Love in Franklin, TN

Current price: $34.99
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Size: Audiobook

A primer on racism that offers an intersectional, anti-racist, coalition-building view of Asian American identity.
"This is and will be a necessary and useful tool for generations to come." —
Jenny Wang
, author of
Permission to Come Home
What does it mean to be Asian American? How does our racialization in the United States shape our lives and our worldviews? With candor and care, Ellie Yang Camp, a Taiwanese American educator, offers a set of ideas and frameworks to guide us toward a more nuanced understanding of these questions. Drawing on her experiences and observations from history, conversations with Asian American peers, and lessons derived from other people of color, Camp unpacks the confusing dynamics that underlie anti-Asian stigmas and stereotypes in the US. From the model minority myth to yellowface to anti-Blackness among Asian communities, Camp presses into hard questions and moments of discomfort, naming fears so that we might dispel them.
Key stories of resistance reveal the importance of solidarity, both among the diverse people under the Asian American umbrella and with all who are exploited by white supremacy. Acknowledging that racism is a system thrust upon us to control us, Camp fuels our boldness to challenge tropes, dismantle prejudices, and embrace self-determination as an act of radical liberation.
A primer on racism that offers an intersectional, anti-racist, coalition-building view of Asian American identity.
"This is and will be a necessary and useful tool for generations to come." —
Jenny Wang
, author of
Permission to Come Home
What does it mean to be Asian American? How does our racialization in the United States shape our lives and our worldviews? With candor and care, Ellie Yang Camp, a Taiwanese American educator, offers a set of ideas and frameworks to guide us toward a more nuanced understanding of these questions. Drawing on her experiences and observations from history, conversations with Asian American peers, and lessons derived from other people of color, Camp unpacks the confusing dynamics that underlie anti-Asian stigmas and stereotypes in the US. From the model minority myth to yellowface to anti-Blackness among Asian communities, Camp presses into hard questions and moments of discomfort, naming fears so that we might dispel them.
Key stories of resistance reveal the importance of solidarity, both among the diverse people under the Asian American umbrella and with all who are exploited by white supremacy. Acknowledging that racism is a system thrust upon us to control us, Camp fuels our boldness to challenge tropes, dismantle prejudices, and embrace self-determination as an act of radical liberation.

More About Barnes and Noble at CoolSprings Galleria

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