A Perilous Path
Book
Review by Kam Williams
A
Perilous Path
Talking
Race, Inequality and the Law
by
Sherrilyn Ifill, Loretta Lynch, Bryan Stevenson and Anthony G.
Thompson
The
New Press
Hardcover,
$14.99
126
pages
ISBN:
978-1-62097-395-0
“We are definitely in
challenging times. A lot of things so many of us fought for are being
deliberately and actively rolled back, trampled on.
But what we're really
seeing, which we have not seen in fifty years, is the peeling away of
the role of government--the move away from protecting the
disenfranchised, the move away from speaking to those who don't have
a voice, [and] the move away from lifting up people who have been
pushed down."
--Former Attorney General
Loretta Lynch (pages 10-11)
This
book is basically a candid conversation among talking heads revolving
around the issue of racial justice in America. In fact, A Perilous
Path is literally an edited version of a spirited chat which took
place on February 27, 2017, during the launch of NYU School of Law's
Center on Race, Inequality and the Law.
On
the dais were four African-Americans luminaries of considerable
stature: former Attorney General Loretta Lynch, President of the
NAACP Legal Defense Fund Sherrilyn Ifill (cousin of the late Gwen
Ifill), MacArthur Genius and best-selling author Bryan Stevenson, and
NYU Professor of Law Anthony C. Thompson.
The
topics they explored ranged from the historical, such as why
emancipation of the slaves failed to usher in an era of freedom and
true equality; to the visionary, such as assessing the prospects for
minorities in the age of Trump.
In
terms of the former, Stephenson asserts that "The North won the
Civil War but the South won the narrative war. The South was able to
persuade the United States Supreme Court that racial equality wasn't
necessary." He laments the thousands of lynchings and other
forms of terrorism which ensued that no one was held accountable for.
Similarly,
he says, "We won passage of the Civil Rights Act. But we lost
the narrative war." Consequently, the segregationists waving
Confederate flags were still able to maintain de facto white
supremacy, evidenced by schools named after disgraced rebels like
Jefferson Davis and Robert E. Lee.
I
doubt you'd find any statues of Hitler and his henchmen scattered
around Germany. Why not? Because not only did the Nazis lose World
War II, they also lost the subsequent cultural war, which explains
why Stephenson concludes for our purposes, "The challenge we
face is a narrative battle."
To
order a copy of A Perilous Path, visit:
https://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1620973952/ref%3dnosim/thslfofire-20
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