Understanding racial gaslighting, using art to shift the lens on Black childhood, and an archivist’s critique of a Native oral history project.
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** Race + Power Weekly
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In this week’s Race + Power Weekly we explore aspects of the process of speaking for oneself when one is positioned as subordinate in society. In the latest Tiny Spark podcast, we hear from Alyce Sadongei, co-director of the Doris Duke Native Oral History Revitalization Project at the Arizona State Museum, University of Arizona. She gives us a glimpse of what it’s like to represent native communities as a museum archivist when they question even the concept of “museum,” a Western idea based on a predatory history.
Colony Little’s piece on Deborah Roberts’s images of black childhood shifts the gaze to Black children and lets them speak for themselves, inviting us to be validated or challenged. The third piece is an example of how we often create new concepts when speaking for ourselves; “racial gaslighting” names a common subordination tactic. Read it and answer our survey question.
Tiny Spark Podcast
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** Power and Consent: Reconsidering Oral History ([link removed])
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Alyce Sadongei, co-director of the Doris Duke Native Oral History Revitalization Project, critiques and celebrates a project to return oral histories to tribes. Listen to the podcast... ([link removed])
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Articles
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Deborah Roberts’s Intricate and Thoughtful Depictions of Black Childhood ([link removed])
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Through collage, artist Deborah Roberts examines the destructive ways that narrow definitions of beauty shape our self-image. Read more... ([link removed])
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** How to recognize if you’re being racially gaslighted ([link removed])
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Angelique Davis, a political science professor at Seattle University, discusses the ways people can be “characterized as violent, stupid, or mentally unstable for calling out racism at all.” Read more... ([link removed])
Race + Power Survey
What does racial gaslighting look like in the nonprofit sector? ([link removed])
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