From Pine View Farm

Still Rising Again after All These Years 0

At Psychology Today Blogs, Heather Rose Artushin talks with Eve L. Ewing about how America’s original sin of chattel slavery continues to affect our society. Their conversation focuses primarily on how schools have served to perpetuate the myth of white racial superiority that was created to justify theft of labor through slavery. Given the recent assaults on schools and libraries and on efforts to promote equality, diversity, and inclusion, I recommend this as a timely and valuable read.

Here’s how the discussion starts (emphasis in the original):

Heather Rose Artushin: Your recent book, Original Sins, explores how American schools have helped build and reinforce an infrastructure of racial inequality. Please share a bit about the racial hierarchy that is rooted in the American education system and what readers should know about the ways our educational system perpetuates systemic racism.

Eve Ewing: The United States has very specific origins defined by the unique intersection of two forms of violence: the institution of chattel slavery and the mass killing and dispossession of the people indigenous to this land. In order for people to abide by these structures in a republic that defines itself as being the “land of the free,” where all men are created equal, requires a kind of mental gymnastics to reconcile a pretty obvious self-contradiction. That’s where schools come in . . . .

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