Just Us: An American Conversation
Just Us: An American Conversation book cover

Just Us: An American Conversation

Kindle Edition

Price
$9.99
Publisher
Graywolf Press
Publication Date

Description

Amazon.com Review An Amazon Best Book of September 2020: Like her award-winning Citizen , Claudia Rankine’s Just Us is comprised of short vignettes, photos, excerpts from textbooks, tweets, historical documents, poems, and her own experiences as a Black woman, which serve to unravel the reality of the racism that runs rampant in our country. From chatting with strangers on airplanes, to recounting moments in her classroom, Rankine challenges herself, her students, and her readers to ask questions about privilege, racism, and bias, and then to listen. Throughout Just Us , Rankine annotates her own words and thoughts, as a way of reminding the reader of her commitment to understanding the evolutionary nature of thought, identifying bias, and then addressing it. In so doing, she encourages the reader to be ever vigilante and open to conversation. Rankine’s brilliance shines through her ideas and her facility with language, but also through the construction of Just Us , which is a truly visual and active inquiry into race. This book is catalyst for not only edification, but for participation and action. —Al Woodworth, Amazon Book Review Review NAMED A BEST BOOK OF 2020 BY THE NEW YORK TIMES , TIME MAGAZINE , NPR, ESQUIRE , THE GUARDIAN , O MAGAZINE , MS. MAGAZINE , STAR TRIBUNE , ST. LOUIS POST DISPATCH , CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR , KIRKUS REVIEWS , AND PUBLISHERS WEEKLY “Rankine has emerged as one of America’s foremost scholars on racial justice. . . . [To] a past we have avoided reckoning, Rankine will be helping America understand itself, one conversation at a time.” ―The Associated Press “[ Just Us is] a brilliant and timely examination of whiteness in America. This consciousness-raising, bravura combination of personal essays, poems, photographs, and cultural commentary works on so many levels and is a skyscraper in the literature on racism.” ― Christian Science Monitor “Claudia Rankine has once again written a book that feels both timely and timeless, and an essential part of the conversations all Americans are having (or should be having) right now.” ― Refinery29 “There is a persistence in Rankine to agitate the evasiveness, or complacency, that has metastasized in the minds of her acquaintances. . . . Her willingness to force other people out of normalcy with frankness, and her inclination toward untethering herself from her economic status and cultural capital through traumatic dialogues, seems unparalleled. . . . Comfort, when so much in our vantage is in shambles, seems a luxury that should collectively be left on the shelf until civilization has worked hard enough to afford it. Which makes a strong case for Just Us as not only the most comprehensive articulation of the racial imaginary Rankine has ever put on paper, but as her magnum opus.” ― 4Columns “[Claudia Rankine] is one of our foremost thinkers, and Just Us is essential reading in 2020 and beyond.” ― BookPage “In this genre-defying work, [Claudia Rankine], as she did so effectively in Citizen , combines poetry, essay, visuals, scholarship, analysis, invective, and argument into a passionate and persuasive case about many of the complex mechanics of race in this country. . . . Rankine writes with disarming intimacy and searing honesty. . . . A work that should move, challenge, and transform every reader who encounters it.” ― Kirkus Reviews , starred review “An incisive, anguished, and very frank call for Americans of all races to cultivate their ‘empathetic imagination’ in order to build a better future.” ― Publishers Weekly , starred review “Rankine presents another arresting blend of essays and images, perfectly attuned to this long-overdue moment of racial reckoning. . . . [Analyzing] the overwhelming power of whiteness in everyday interaction . . . Rankine once again opens a literary window into the Black experience, for those willing to look in.” ― Booklist , starred review “Rankine seeks to find a space beyond white defensiveness and guilt where meaningful discussions can take place. . . . A must-read to add to the conversation on racism, antiracism, and white fragility.” ― Library Journal , starred review “This brilliant and multi-layered work by Claudia Rankine is a call, a bid, an insistent, rightly impatient demand for a public conversation on whiteness. . . . A rare honesty toward a potential affirmation. Anyone who turns away from this bold and vital invitation to get to work would be a damn fool.” ―Judith Butler “In my work, well-meaning white people consistently ask me how to recognize racism. Yet we might ask, ‘How have we managed not to know?’ The information is everywhere, if we care to listen. Indeed, here is illuminating testimony that is both poetic and well beyond the abstract. With clarity and grace, Claudia Rankine delivers a gut punch to white denial. Just Us is stunning work―audacious, revelatory, devastating.” ―Robin DiAngelo “With Just Us , Claudia Rankine offers further proof that she is one of our essential thinkers about race, difference, politics, and the United States of America. Written with humility and humor, criticism and compassion, Just Us asks difficult questions and begins necessary conversations.” ―Viet Thanh Nguyen “Fiercely intimate, rigorous. . . . [ Just Us ] lets all of us in on the conversations―with others and the self―that are necessary for survival, which, attested by this all-too-human account, is rooted in the vigilance that racially imagined people must maintain for their very being.” ―Nuar Alsadir “In Just Us , Claudia Rankine continues her remarkable and brilliant interrogation of the language, culture, and history that have shaped America, forging through poems, essays, and documents a literary archive that is utterly original and desperately needed.” ―Dinaw Mengestu --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition. About the Author Claudia Rankine is the author of Citizen: An American Lyric and four previous books, including Don’t Let Me Be Lonely: An American Lyric . Her work has appeared recently in the Guardian , the New York Times Book Review , the New York Times Magazine , and the Washington Post . She is a chancellor of the Academy of American Poets, the winner of the 2014 Jackson Poetry Prize, and a contributing editor of Poets & Writers . She received a MacArthur Fellowship in 2016. Rankine is the Frederick Iseman Professor of Poetry at Yale University. --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • FINALIST FOR THE 2021 ANDREW CARNEGIE MEDAL FOR EXCELLENCE IN NONFICTIONClaudia Rankine’s
  • Citizen
  • changed the conversation—
  • Just Us
  • urges all of us into it
  • As everyday white supremacy becomes increasingly vocalized with no clear answers at hand, how best might we approach one another? Claudia Rankine, without telling us what to do, urges us to begin the discussions that might open pathways through this divisive and stuck moment in American history.
  • Just Us
  • is an invitation to discover what it takes to stay in the room together, even and especially in breaching the silence, guilt, and violence that follow direct addresses of whiteness. Rankine’s questions disrupt the false comfort of our culture’s liminal and private spaces—the airport, the theater, the dinner party, the voting booth—where neutrality and politeness live on the surface of differing commitments, beliefs, and prejudices as our public and private lives intersect.This brilliant arrangement of essays, poems, and images includes the voices and rebuttals of others: white men in first class responding to, and with, their white male privilege; a friend’s explanation of her infuriating behavior at a play; and women confronting the political currency of dying their hair blond, all running alongside fact-checked notes and commentary that complements Rankine’s own text, complicating notions of authority and who gets the last word.Sometimes wry, often vulnerable, and always prescient,
  • Just Us
  • is Rankine’s most intimate work, less interested in being right than in being true, being together.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(328)
★★★★
25%
(137)
★★★
15%
(82)
★★
7%
(38)
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Most Helpful Reviews

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Thoughtful, thought-provoking

I cry as I finish this, an eloquent, insightful, first-person view of our racist world, its white privilege, its micro-aggressions, its villains, and its heroes...
4 people found this helpful
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Racism must become socially unacceptable. We must look at our complicity.

“I don’t see color,” her airplane seat-mate says.
““Aren’t you a white man?” I [Rankin] then asked. “Can’t you see that? Because if you can’t see race, you can’t see racism.”

Rankin challenges us to look at our complicity in racism. "To create discomfort by pointing out facts is seen as socially unacceptable.” She asks “what it takes to stay in the room together, even and especially in breaching the silence, guilt, and violence that follow direct addresses of whiteness.” Do those who experience and benefit from white privilege ever think about it. Do they recognize it, even while they are experiencing it? “I ask a white friend about white people speaking among themselves about their racism. It doesn’t happen, she tells me.”

We need to do the work of being together, to converse, to learn from one another she says: “Our silence, our refusal of discomfort, our willful blindness, the shut-down feeling that refuses engagement, the rage that cancels complexity of response are also strategies. So is the need for answers and new strategies. The call for a strategy is a strategy, and I both respect and understand the necessity of that call.”

Rankin's essays, poems and images address the key issue of our day. The tone and strength feel intensified, raw. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ NOTE: This book does not work well as an #ebook, there are notes and pictures that do not lend themselves to an electronic format.

QUOTE: “Among white people, black people are allowed to talk about their precarious lives, but they are not allowed to implicate the present company in that precariousness. They are not allowed to point out its causes. In “Sexism—a Problem with a Name,” Sara Ahmed writes that “if you name the problem you become the problem.” To create discomfort by pointing out facts is seen as socially unacceptable. Let’s get over ourselves, it’s structural not personal, I want to shout at everyone, including myself.”
3 people found this helpful
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Receipts Included

I am already a fan of Ms Rankine. She presents for me some thought provoking questions. She brings some compelling perspective and includes the receipts, the reference sources. She delivers it with a particularly satisfying prose style.
3 people found this helpful
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Enlightening

This book provided the facts and “food for thought” I needed to better understand the many ways our culture, society, world perpetuates ideals, racism, norms. It helped explain my built in bias and racism in ways I never considered before.
Acknowledging and recognizing the elements that perpetuate racist (and other) beliefs and behaviors goes a long way toward being able to see a way for change.
2 people found this helpful
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Difficult but important read

This challenging text forced me, as a white man, and as someone who already considered himself thoughtful and informed, to think about racism and inherent white privilege in new ways. By walking the reader through her own questions step by step, Rankine exposes subtleties in arguments that are often not obvious in popular media.
2 people found this helpful
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Good!

An amazing read by a very wise woman.
2 people found this helpful
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A tough and thoughtful read

This book was challenging, and in good ways. I think I was expecting something slightly more structured and actionable, but I am not disappointed. It does require some rereading to ensure full comprehension, and frankly, the lived experienced described here mean I will need to read it again several times to truly comprehend.
1 people found this helpful
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Meaty dissections

So much to chew through here...not a necessarily a quick or easy read, but full of thoughts and situations that need to process through this white girl's system slowly and carefully to maximize absorption.
1 people found this helpful
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Engaging!

This book is certainly more prose than poetry, and much of the prose can be classified as ruminations on conversations. She spends a great portion of the pages recounting experiences around conversations she has with white strangers and friends about their whiteness. She takes great pains to remain optimistic about the possibility of personal dialogue as a path to healing the scourge of anti-Black racism. To that end, there are some enlightening moments for her, and for us as readers.

It’s not a poetry book per se, but her writing is indeed often poetic.I guess I was expecting more poetry even though it isn’t billed as a book of poetry. So, that is entirely my fault. Hearing the name Claudine Rankin immediately brought to mind, poetry. Don’t make the mistake I made, it might color your opinion of the finished product. I shifted my mind from my faulty and hasty perspective and engaged with this “American Conversation” and I deem it a worthy exploration of time and energy.

“Have so many become so vulnerable to white dominance that the pathways to imagined change are wiped out of our brains and our default consciousnesses are in their lowest levels of activity, meaning we can no longer envision a new type of future or even really see what’s happening in our present?” Claudine consistently writes with a seriousness of purpose and that makes these conversations unavoidably engaging.
💥💥💥💥
1 people found this helpful