Slavery to Mass Incarceration
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Slavery to Mass Incarceration
Slavery to Mass Incarceration
Equal Justice Initiative
An animation video illustrates how slavery tied to race evolved to an ideology of white supremacy, systemic segregation, and racist laws to the mass incarceration of people of color.
Molly Crabapple, the artist and activist whose bold and important work is on view in this Equal Justice Initiative’s "Slavery to Mass Incarceration" video will be joining PEN in New York City on Monday, November 2, with a talk titled "How to Draw the Elephant in the Room."
Tickets are on sale now - get yours here for a chance to see this fierce artist discuss how to draw and give voice to the invisible.
Check out this insightful video by Equal Justice Initiative "Slavery to Mass Incarceration" that dispels the myth of racial difference that was created to sustain American slavery and still persists today. Narrated by EJI's founder Bryan Stevenson and artist @mollycrabapple.
Slavery to Mass Incarceration
The myth of racial difference that was created to sustain American slavery persists today. Slavery did not end in 1865, it evolved. #SlaveryEvolved
The legacy of slavery can be seen in the presumption of guilt and dangerousness assigned to African Americans, especially young men and boys, the racial profiling and mistreatment that presumption creates, and the racial dynamics of mass incarceration.
"Slavery to Mass Incarceration" is narrated by Bryan Stevenson. The art is by Molly Crabapple. EJI’s Race and Poverty project explores racial history and attempts to deepen our understanding of the legacy of racial injustice. By telling the truth about our past, EJI believes we can create a different, healthier discourse about race in America. More information here: http://www.eji.org/raceandpoverty
Stunning Video We Wished Existed, Now Does
Watching Sandra Bland’s violent arrest for a lane-change becomes more deeply sickening with the knowledge that she will die under nefarious circumstances in her jail cell three days later. It is a gift that we can see Bland as the strong, vital, and beautiful woman she was in her now-viral Facebook clip made some time before her death on the germane topic of #BlackLivesMatter.
As grieved and helpless as stories like Bland’s make us feel, it stands to reason that we can better overcome this incessant brutality by learning about its origins. Explaining the critical link between deaths like Bland’s and America’s history of slavery can be a challenging task under pressure—at a bar, at a family event, around the water cooler. Same goes for the link between slavery and the poverty, violence, and high rates of incarceration in many black communities. This 6-minute video, gorgeously illustrated and succinctly narrated by civil rights hero Bryan Stevenson, is a powerful tool in drawing those connections. It’s the first video in what will be a series of five.
If you think you know what you’re about to see, don’t be sure. My guess is you’ll learn or feel something you didn’t expect. Watch. SHARE.
(via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r4e_djVSag4)