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Common Ground Vol. 1
Common Ground Vol. 2
Courier Interview
Flipping the Script
White
Priviledge Shapes The U.S.
White
Priviledge: Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack
My Experience Growing Up
Black
Dialogue Group Notes
Dialogue Group 0501
Dialogue Group 0502
Dialogue Group 0503
Dialogue Group 0504
Dialogue Group 0505
Other Resources
SPLC-
Teaching Tolerance
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Recommended Reading List
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And
don't call me a racist!:
"And don't call me a racist!" is a book which is a treasury of
quotes on the past, present, and future of the color line in
America. The quotes were selected and arranged by Ella Mazel.
In this rich anthology of affirmations, assertions, definitions,
analyses, and assessments of race and racism one comes as close
as is possible to understanding what it is like to be in someone
else's skin in America. This is one of the most concise,
comprehensive, and inclusive collections of quotes on race ever
to be published! The range of thinking on the color line from
the inception of the United States to the present offers the
reader a powerful and accessible history of race in America. |
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Holding up the Mirror:
The Circle of Simplicity speaks to readers seeking to find
greater peace and happiness by eliminating some of the clutter and
distraction in their lives. Andrews offers detailed instructions
on how to form and run a simplicity circle, a support group for
the terminally harried. Her book emphasizes the value of slowing
down as a way to find time to reconnect with a community. But
Andrews' idea of simplicity is vague, the remedy for a wide
variety of discontents. For her it means, for one thing, eating
out often, because cooking makes her "crabby." Instead of
embracing the frugality advocated in other books, The Circle
of Simplicity mostly echoes the weightless profundities of
what used to be called the human potential movement. |
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Study Circles: This
digital document is an article from New Statesman
(1996), published by New Statesman, Ltd. on August 16,
1996. The length of the article is 876 words. The page
length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page.
The article is delivered in HTML format and is available
in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after
purchase. You can view it with any web browser. |
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Uprooting Racism:
Continuously at the top of New Society Publishers' best-seller
list for five years, Uprooting Racism has been revised
and expanded with more tools than ever to help white people
understand and stand-up to racism. In addition to updating
existing chapters, the new edition explores how entrenched
racism has been revealed in the new economy, voting, anti-Arab
prejudice, and health care policy. |
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Letters Across the Divide:
In this stirring book, two friends-a black minister and a
white businessman-discuss candidly the
hang-ups, stereotypes, and sins that inhibit interracial
friendships. Some people may think that racism is no longer a
problem in our society, but David Anderson and Brent Zuercher
make an effective case for just the opposite: both black and
white people still harbor wrong assumptions and resentments
toward each other. Believing that the church is called to a
deeply felt reconciliation between the races, Anderson and
Zuercher strive to understand each other. They hash out their
differences, giving voice to feelings most of us have had but
would never express out loud. The result is a book that provokes
thought, arouses emotion, and ultimately spurs actions,
stressing that the most effective way of dealing with the many
facets of racial reconciliation is through real and connected
friendships. |
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