As we celebrate 50 years of AAP's PROSE Awards, we are proud to announce this year's Finalists and Category Winners.
See more ⬇️
publishers.org/news/associa...
As we celebrate 50 years of AAP's PROSE Awards, we are proud to announce this year's Finalists and Category Winners.
See more ⬇️
publishers.org/news/associa...
We’ve got 2 finalists for @americanpublish.bsky.social’s 50th annual PROSE Awards!
🙌🏽 TELL HER STORY for Biography and Autobiography
🙌🏽 THE CORONER’S SILENCE for Legal Studies and Criminology
Let’s hear it for @madameclair08.bsky.social and @terencekeel.bsky.social! bit.ly/4tLNSol
new on @carceralhistory.bsky.social: distinguished historian @madameclair08.bsky.social pitches her new @beaconpress.bsky.social book, TELL HER STORY: Eleanor Bumpurs & the Police Killing That Galvanized New York City
carceral-history.ghost.io/authors-pitc...
40+ years after Eleanor Bumpurs’ death, the public continues to remember her. Her daughter, Mary, says the legacy of her case is to keep her spirit moving. To let people know what happened to her. @madameclair08.bsky.social
#OTD 41 years ago, Eleanor Bumpurs, a Black woman with mental health challenges, was killed by the NYPD. Her death still drives calls for police accountability. Historian Ashley Farmer, Bumpurs’ former neighbor, explores why people continue to #SayHerName. buff.ly/j8S3oQP
Even before police officers went into Eleanor Bumpurs’s house on #TDIH in 1984, she had already been harmed by the city. They did not give her adequate psychiatric services. They did not give her municipal services. @madameclair08.bsky.social
“Like many New Yorkers, she [Eleanor Bumpurs] witnessed the ravages of Reaganomics on working-class and poor people, including her own family.” — @madameclair08.bsky.social
In a time before viral videos and hashtags, activists and cultural critics invoked Eleanor Bumpurs when talking about police brutality. @madameclair08.bsky.social has written the first ever biography about her, TELL HER STORY. @chicagorevbooks.bsky.social
Thank you!😍
Tell Her Story Eleanor Bumpurs & the Police Killing That Galvanized New York City By LaShawn Harris “[An] immersive account . . . With a kaleidoscopic view of the shooting’s aftermath that draws on interviews, court proceedings, and national and international reactions, Harris paints the killing as a major turning point in American political consciousness, when Black activists and the public began to question police treatment of the disabled and mentally ill. The result is an elegantly written and riveting view of a pivotal but little-remembered political sea change.” —Publishers Weekly, Starred Review “Harris’s impeccably researched and elegantly written volume brings new visibility to this significant story.” —Ms. Magazine “An excellent study of the 1980s that captures the heart and soul of the social movements that foreshadowed calls to ‘Say her name.’ A timely and necessary book.” —Marcia Chatelain, author of the Pulitzer Prize–winning Franchise: The Golden Arches in Black America “A powerful and poignant rescuing of the life and tragic murder of Eleanor Bumpurs . . . will both haunt and inspire. . . . Her searing narrative reminds us that this nation’s too-regular and brutal police killings of Black women have always been met by extraordinary family and community mobilization, and the demand for justice.” —Heather Ann Thompson, author of the Pulitzer Prize–winning Blood in the Water: The Attica Prison Uprising of 1971 and Its Legacy “A gripping historical rendition of the tumultuous transition from the hope of the civil rights era to the misguided projections of a presumed post-racial Obama era . . . It is an absolute must-read.” —Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor, author of Race for Profit: How Banks and the Real Estate Industry Undermined Black Homeownership [truncated for space]
Tell Her Story: Eleanor Bumpurs & the Police Killing That Galvanized New York City by LaShawn Harris. (@madameclair08.bsky.social)
link to publisher's web page:
www.beacon.org/Tell-Her-Sto...
@madameclair08.bsky.social was only 10 yrs old when her neighbor, Eleanor Bumpurs, was shot dead by an NYPD officer. Harris was drawn to her life story because she’d grown up hearing Bumpurs mentioned in hip hop and Spike Lee films.
Hope the pups like the book. 😍🐶
30 years after Eleanor Bumpurs’s death, New Yorkers and those beyond the Empire State continue to #SayHerName. Today’s activists remember her and have introduced her tragic story to new generations of social justice advocates. @madameclair08.bsky.social buff.ly/yzJe3fe
Who was Eleanor Bumpers before her fatal encounter with the NYPD on October 29, 1984? @madameclair08.bsky.social wrote TELL HER STORY to uncover Bumpers’s personal history, her dreams and aspirations, who she was as a mother and neighbor.
@madameclair08.bsky.social’s TELL HER STORY shows how Eleanor Bumpers’s assassination in 1984 set off a movement against police violence. And it’s on @msmagazine.com’s new August books roundup! 🤩
Through her own personal connection with Eleanor Bumpurs, @madameclair08.bsky.social recounts and honors this #SayHerName memory in TELL HER STORY. And it comes out tomorrow!
The @karenhunter.bsky.social show welcomes Award-Winning Historian; Author of "TELL HER STORY: Eleanor Bumpurs & the Police Killing that Galvanized New York City" – Available Tomorrow! : LaShawn Harris!
@madameclair08.bsky.social #MotivationalMonday #KarenRebels
"Tell Her Story: Eleanor Bumpurs & the Police Killing That Galvanized New York City"
www.amazon.com/Tell-Her-Sto...
@karenhunter.bsky.social @madameclair08.bsky.social #KarenRebels
Happy #PubDay, @madameclair08.bsky.social! 🎉
TELL HER STORY, the life and 1984 murder of a beloved Black grandmother, Eleanor Bumpers, that changed community activism forever, is “an immersive account.” — @publisherswkly.bsky.social, ⭐Starred Review buff.ly/DnytLvf
"This [eviction] was never a thing for the police to get involved with. What were they going to do, put her in the street?"
Read an excerpt from professor and historian LaShawn Harris's new book, "Tell Her Story: Eleanor Bumpurs & the Police Killing That Galvanized New York City" here:
Alt text Cover of "I Didn't Come Here to Lie: My Life and Education," by Karen Lewis & Elizabeth Todd-Breland; Foreword by Angela Y. Davis, Afterword by Stacy Davis Gates. Image on cover of of Karen Lewis with her hands raised wearing a red CTU shirt. Title in Bold Black writing above image--author info. below image
Alt text Back cover of Karen Lewis memoir, I Didn't Come Here to Lie, with blurbs by Eve L. Ewing, Bettina L. Love, Barbara Ransby, ad Jesse Hagopian
I am forever honored that Karen Lewis entrusted me to co-author her memoir--I Didn’t Come Here to Lie: My Life and Education @haymarketbooks.org Karen was a powerful labor leader, formidable fighter & staunch defender of students, teachers & public education 1/ www.haymarketbooks.org/books/2444-i...
Beauticians continue to teach us lessons on how to strategize in difficult political movements.
Blurbs are in for "Tell Her Story." Thank you great scholars and friends. Thank you @beaconpress.bsky.social
Read all the blurbs here: www.beacon.org/Tell-Her-Sto...
Text: 10 Years Ago, Baltimore Rose Up Picture: A crowd confronts a phalanx of riot police
Text: The Struggle for Justice Continues Photo: A civil disobedient action with people laying down in the street, as if they have been killed
Text: same as the post
It’s been 10 years since Freddie Gray’s death in 2015 and the Uprising that followed. Many in Baltimore remember the grief, anger and pain of those days, but also the solidarity and organizing that came from taking to the streets and declaring “Whose streets? Our streets.”
Demonstrations took place across the country, uniting a myriad of criticisms of the Trump administration under one message: "Hands off."
The fate of trans, intersex, and nonbinary people is not a political ideology, it’s a matter of human rights, civil rights, and freedom of expression.
This return to McCarthyism by other means is a leap backwards to a grim chapter of US history. #TransLivesMatter 🏳️⚧️