From Indivisible Team <[email protected]>
Subject Sprinkle a little racial justice into your holidays
Date December 16, 2023 5:03 PM
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Friend,

It’s holiday time, and you know what holidays mean to us? [ [link removed]- ]Books!
Hooray!

…Stick with us here.

From the earliest inception of Indivisible, we’ve been a literary
organization: We began with a guide, continued to create even more guides,
and even published an [ [link removed]- ]entire book of our own about the Indivisible
movement. 

Earlier this year, we sent out a survey asking Indivisibles: How are you
learning about racial justice? We thought that we’d get a few quick
replies and end up with a clearer gauge about where our network stood on
continuing to teach themselves about racial justice.

Boy were we wrong.

We got hundreds of replies from Indivisibles all across the country giving
us in-depth information about what they were using to further their
education. It was beautiful. It was brilliant. It was illuminating. 

Indivisibles are really working to keep this movement aiming towards a
more inclusive environment every day. 

What could we do with this information though? As Indivisibles, we share
tactics, information, and results across the country so that we can become
the most effective activists possible; how do we do the same with survey
results? 

[ [link removed]- ]Introducing: For Indivisibles, By Indivisibles: A Racial Justice
Reading List

We took the more than 300 books you submitted (with many excellent
repeats) and trimmed the list down into a manageable resource for your
continued racial justice education -- all recommended by other
Indivisibles. It’s broken down into two sections:

* [ [link removed]- ]Top Five -- The top five most recommended books
* [ [link removed]- ]Curated list -- A curated list broken down by genre/style. 

Wondering what sort of books might be included? Here’s a quick preview of
your top five (check out the resource for full descriptions):

 1. “Caste: The Origins of our Discontents” by Isabel Wilkerson
 2. “The 1619 Project” created by Nikole Hannah Jones (et. al)
 3. “How to be Antiracist” by Ibram X Kendi
 4. “White Fragility” by Robin DiAngelo
 5. “The New Jim Crow” by Michelle Alexander

Those are both some of the most popular and the most acclaimed racial
justice resources of our time, and they are all directly recommended by
Indivisibles (up to 45 times).

For the curated section, you’ll have your pick of Personal Essay and
Narrative, Explicitly Addressing Whiteness, Radical Black Feminism,
History and Context, Novel, and Young Adult and Children’s. No matter what
type of reading you like to do, there’s something here for you!

As we round out this holiday season, why not add a book on racial justice
to your list? To be honest, at a time when Republicans are trying to ban
books, we think the greatest gift you can give is knowledge.

Check out [ [link removed]- ]For Indivisibles, By Indivisibles: A Racial Justice Reading
List today and make your holidays a little more radical, a lot more
inclusive, and still so much fun!

In solidarity,
Indivisible Team

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