After Life Spiral-Bound | 2022-10-25
Rhae Lynn Barnes (Edited by) Keri Leigh Merritt (Edited by) Yohuru Williams (Edited by)
After Life
Providing context for the entire volume, After Life's Introduction explains how COVID-19 and America's long history of inequality, combined with a corrupt and unconcerned federal government, produced one of the darkest times in our nation's history. Discussing the rise of the COVID-19 death toll in the United States, eventually exceeding the 1918 flu, the AIDS epidemic, and the Civil War, it ties public health, immigration, white supremacy, elections history, and epidemics together, and provides a short history of the Black Lives Matter protests of 2020 and the beginnings of a Third Reconstruction.
After Life documents how Americans have dealt with grief, pain, and loss, both individually and communally, and how we endure and thrive. The title is an affirmation that even in our suspended half-living during lockdowns and quarantines, we are a nation of survivors--with an unprecedented chance to rebuild society in a more equitable way.
Contributors include: Gwendolyn Hall, Heather Ann Thompson, Jacquelyn Dowd Hall, Keith Ellison, Keri Leigh Merritt, Martha Hodes, Mary Kathryn Nagle, Mary L. Dudziak, Monica Muñoz Martinez, Peniel E. Joseph, Philip J. Deloria, Rhae Lynn Barnes, Robert L. Tsai, Robin D. G. Kelley, Scott Poulson-Bryant, Stephen Berry, Tera W. Hunter, Ula Y. Taylor, and, Yohuru Williams.
"So much grief. So many gone. We need an account--one that is deeply personal and objective. Some way to make sense of what has happened and what is happening to us. After Life: A Collective History of Loss and Redemption in Pandemic America is that accounting. Read every page. Absorb its lessons. Feel this book in these challenging times and experience something, at once, powerfully healing and insightful." --Eddie S Glaude Jr., author of Begin Again: James Baldwin's America and Its Urgent Lesson for Our Own
"Breathtakingly refreshing in scope and content, After Life is history the way history should be written. Bringing together an incredibly diverse group of scholars, this book walks us through the worst days of the pandemic but offers us tools to create a better future." --Ibram X. Kendi
"Sometimes, you don't know what you really need until you read it. In After Life, some of America's most searching minds sift through the wreckage of the pandemic to provide us precious shards of light, so that the unfathomable loss of life--more than all the Americans who died in the Civil War or in World War II--will not be in vain." --Nancy MacLean, author of Democracy in Chains: The Deep History of the Radical Right's Stealth Plan for America
"These essays seek to understand how we got here, document the pandemic's impact on the lives of regular Americans, and write early drafts of the history of such cataclysmic pandemic-era events as June 2020's Black Lives Matter rallies and January 2021's white nationalist uprising at the U.S. Capitol. After Life is timely, compassionate, and necessary." --Booklist
"Do nations have souls? Has America lost its soul? Loss and redemption are two deeply human and American ideas; generally we like the second one better. In this amazing collection of perspectives, loss takes its proper place as genuine tragedy. Largely by tapping historians, Barnes, Merritt and Williams have found a gold mine of reflection on the moral, medical, racial, and political condition of the American experiment. These pieces show, darkly but beautifully, how thoughtful people have been hurt, or destroyed, past and present; but they also inspire paths forward not to a promised land, but to a functional, honest society and a new republic." --David W. Blight, Yale University, author of Pulitzer-prize winning Frederick Douglass: Prophet of Freedom
"Rhae Lynn Barnes, Keri Leigh Merritt, and Yohuru Williams have ring-mastered an excellent book of powerful thinkers mourning all the unnecessary losses of the past few years--and pointing, possibly, toward American redemption." --Brad DeLong, author of Slouching Towards Utopia: An Economic History of the Long 20th Century, 1870-2010
Rhae Lynn Barnes is an Assistant Professor at Princeton University and the Sheila Biddle Ford Foundation Fellow at the Hutchins Center for African & African American Research at Harvard University. She was the 2020 President of the Andrew W. Mellon Society of Fellows in Critical Bibliography. Barnes is the author of the forthcoming book Darkology: When the American Dream Wore Blackface.
Keri Leigh Merritt is a historian, writer, and activist based in Atlanta, Georgia. She is the author of Masterless Men: Poor Whites and Slavery in the Antebellum South, and the co-editor of Reconsidering Southern Labor History: Race, Class, and Power.
Yohuru Williams is Distinguished University Chair and Professor of History, and founding director of the Racial Justice Initiative at the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul. He is the author of Black Politics/White Power: Civil Rights Black Power and Black Panthers in New Haven, and Teaching Beyond the Textbook: Six Investigative Strategies, and, co-author with Bryan Shih of The Black Panthers: Portrait of an Unfinished Revolution.