Resist: How a Century of Young Black Activists Shaped America

Rita Omokha
Macmillan/St. Martin's Press

Growing up as a Nigerian immigrant in the South Bronx, award-winning journalist Rita Omokha contended with her Blackness. In 2020, when George Floyd died at the hands of a white police officer, her exploration further developed as she traveled to thirty states attempting to mine contemporary race relations in the United States.

In Resist, Omokha charts the last century of civil rights activism, from the early years of renowned activist Ella Baker and others she inspired, to the first glimpse of allyship in the Bates Seven and a renewed examination of the Black Panther Party, all the way to the current generation of young Black revolutionaries who walked American cities in the wake of the murders of countless Black people.

Read more at MacMillan

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The Black Utopians: Searching for Paradise and the Promised Land in America

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Poverty Rebels: Black and Brown Protest in Post–Civil Rights America