Essays exploring unjust conditions faced by Black women as well as what White people should do to dismantle racism.
“In this part memoir, part cultural critique,” Holt writes, “I have done my best to describe what it means to be a young Black woman navigating ‘post-racial’ America through my memories, recollections, and experiences.” The author, who has worked for BuzzFeed and written for Rolling Stone, the Guardian, and other publications, signed a book deal after her 2020 New York Times op-ed about celebrating Juneteenth went viral. Now 27, she focuses on cultural appropriation in society and especially on social media. “Black women’s style and swag are often stolen and then praised on their white counterparts,” writes the author, “rendering Black women invisible, or worse, denigrated for the very things white people have stolen from them.” Holt posits that “the idea that we live in a post-racial society” may be responsible for the widespread belief that “unity or simple notions of togetherness are solutions to solving racism and creating a more just world for Black people….But that simply isn’t the case.” Drawing from more than 100 sources, including studies, videos, tweets, and interviews she conducted, Holt illustrates insidious examples of how “whiteness often practices self-preservation,” which leads to numerous deleterious effects on Black women. The chapters bear titles such as “Leave the Box Braids for the Black Girls” and “The Road to Healing On- and Offline,” and all close with descriptions of actions necessary for improvement. For example, Holt writes, White women “must self-reflect and acknowledge their own blind spots, while simultaneously counteracting them by making space for, showing up for, and passing along opportunities to Black women.” Holt offers particularly potent critiques of unconscious bias in the workplace and the many flaws inherent in White feminism.
A commendable, colloquial perspective on a continually fraught topic.