Jennifer Morrison, (Instagram, June 17, 2020)
âPushout: The Criminalization of Black Girls in Schools, Monique W. Morris (2016)

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Jennifer Morrison, (Instagram, June 17, 2020)
âPushout: The Criminalization of Black Girls in Schools, Monique W. Morris (2016)
Giuro che il cuore cel'ho ancora, ma si Ăš spostato nello stomaco.
@a-dreamer
The Digital Home for Duke University Professor and Left of Black host Mark Anthony Neal
Monique W. Morris - Pushout: The Criminalization of Black Girls in Schools
Monique W. Morris â Pushout: The Criminalization of Black Girls in Schools
âFor Black girls, to be âghettoâ represents a certain resilience to how poverty has shaped racial and gender oppression. To be âloudâ it to demand to be heard. To have an âattitudeâ is to reject a doctrine of invisibility and maltreatment. To be flamboyantâor âfabulousââis to revise the idea that socioeconomic isolation is equated with not having access to materially desirable things. To be aâŠ
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Because if weâre not involved in educating and supporting the babies, who really is? Keeping that âwe all we gotâ type energy and having deep appreciation to all those who are looking out for Black children inside the classroom and out. â„ïž #whyarealltheblackkidssittingtogetherinthecafeteria #ghostsintheschoolyard #pushout #justiceonbothsides #bnplit https://www.instagram.com/p/B5vXC80FmUQ/?igshid=1e121pqrh8zya
push out
Inspired by Monique Morrisâ âPushoutâÂ
I donât want my daughter to ever think
that itâs okay to feel
as if your body belongs to another,
as if you owe someone a part of your aura.
 You were not put on this earth to please someone else.
Your autonomy is yours, and you should never be forced
to kiss someoneâs cheek, or have your hair be pet.
 You should be recognized for your worth, not your wealth.
You can use your body for what you want butâ
I donât want to see you prop your hand on your hip,
eleven years old and in a detention center,
and tell me that you sell your body to help your family
and you know how to make a man feel good.
 I did not push you out of my womb
after carrying you and creating you
for much longer than nine months,
for you to be pushed out of the life that you deserve,
for you to be sold for less than what youâre worth.
 Our girls are sacred and loved,
she whispered to me as she handed me my childâ
bloody and soft but warm.
I hope I never see you like that again
because of the cruelties of this world.Â
May you stay realized yet pure.
Our girls are sacred and loved.
REGISTRATION IS NOW OPEN for our February 9 program:
Join us for a close look at the roles, needs, and contributions of black women and girls in the context of the Black Lives Matter Movement moment. Nikole Hannah-Jones moderates a conversation with Monique W. Morris, author of Pushout, Monifa Bandele, VP and Chief Partnership & Diversity Officer at MomsRising, and Kimberlé W. Crenshaw, renowned author, civil rights advocate, and founding scholar of Critical Race Theory.
A book signing will follow. Click the image above to RSVP.
From Punishment to Promise