So You Want to Talk About Race
Leah Langby
June 28, 2018
Keeping Up With Kids
book cover for So you want to talk about race by Ijeoma Oluo

Over the past few weeks, I’ve been reading a book that has  helped me think and process and move my own needle a little bit as I am considering my own behavior and ideas around race.  I HIGHLY recommend So You Want to Talk about Race by Ijeoma Oluo.    The six copies held by the MORE system are all checked out right now, so if your library doesn’t own it, you might want to consider ordering a copy of this New York Times Bestseller.  I know I’m going to want to read it again (I might have to buy my own copy of this one).

I have been thinking about/working on/reading about/learning about race and racism and privilege  for many years.  I’m still a work in progress, not surprisingly.  It’s a big and complex and difficult issue, and I’m a product of a society and system that have taught me bias and reinforced racism from the time I was born.  Sometimes, though, I think I end up with my own ego very much attached to being knowledgeable and insightful about the issues, which makes me less able to see the ways I need to improve, admit the ways I’ve messed up, and move forward.  This book has helped me take a step back and really examine this tendency, and realize that messing up is definitely going to just be part of the deal, but I still need to talk and act. 

Oluo explains a lot of basics about race and racism in a very accessible and actionable way, so its a good text for people who are just starting to bump up against these issues, but also a powerful book for people who have been thinking about this for a while.  It seems mainly written with a white audience in mind, though she does give some suggestions and ideas specifically to people of color.  She defines terms, explains concepts, provides illustrative anecdotes, examples, and analogies.  She recommends things to say in various situations, and ends with a chapter of what to do beyond talking.

If you are looking for a brief introduction, you can hear a segment she did on Wisconsin Public Radio last week! I highly recommend this book, and would love to talk to you about it once you have read it!

search all blog posts using keywords or title, date, categories

Archives

Categories

Related Articles

IFLS Youth Services Check-In: Play!

Great questions were asked, great ideas were swapped!  Here are a few highlights (sorry if I’m forgetting something):   Karen Magnusson (formerly of Woodville, now of Baldwin) gave a report about her experience at the Play, Make, Learn Conference in...

Great Halloween Cupcake Bake-Off in Phillips

Thanks to Linda Johnson, the new youth services librarian in Phillips, for sharing this fun collaboration.  Leveraging her existing connection with the school and with the Family and Consumer Education teacher, Linda organized a Great Halloween Cupcake Bake-Off for...

The Power of Partnerships (guest post by Valerie Spooner)

I had a great chat with Valerie Spooner, the youth services librarian in Ladysmith, this afternoon.  I LOVED hearing this story about the ways putting in the time for partnerships and relationships can pay off! In 2020 I was able to fulfill one of my library dreams -...