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    Books

    An Emergency Syllabus for White People Who Keep Asking: “Where Do I Start?”

    By Dr. Stacey PattonMarch 27, 202610 Mins Read
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    Every week, without fail, a well-meaning white person slides into one of my inboxes like they’ve just washed up on the shores of racial consciousness, blinking in the sunlight, clutching their moral résumé, and whispering, “I’m a good white person. I’m learning. I want to be better.”

    They arrive announcing their anger at all that’s happening in our country, they announce their allyship, their unlearning, good intentions, freshly discovered discomfort, and then right on cue they ask me to hand them a map. Where do I start? What can I read or watch?”

    They ask for books, documentaries, a syllabus. They want a gentle on-ramp to the truth. As if the entire internet does not exist or Google is broken. As if centuries of Black scholarship, struggle, blood, and analysis are not already catalogued, indexed, and sitting two clicks away.

    Deeeep sigh.

    So here, goddammit . . .

    Since y’all keep begging for Black folks to build you a syllabus for free, I’m gonna give you a list of books so thorough, so radical, and so academically and spiritually inconvenient, that y’all won’t need to ask me a damn thing for a very long, long time. It took me a bit to get it together, but here is the syllabus for white folks who claim they’re ready to “unlearn” and ready to lose the story that casts them as innocent, central, and morally evolving heroes of history.

    And I want Y’all to know that I’m putting this annotated list of 20 books together in one long, side-eye-heavy breath instead of a polite little book club handout. And this list ain’t the usual corporate-DEI, “we’re all healing,” NPR tote-bag syllabus that bored white liberals cling to when they want to feel “educated” without feeling threatened. It ain’t the kind of reading list that coddles or therapizes whiteness. I’m giving Y’all a list that actually scrapes the bone. Some shit written by Black folks with Afros, thick-ass glasses, arrest records, and FBI files.

    Start with W.E.B. Du Bois’ Black Reconstruction in America, because white folks love to talk about “moving forward” without knowing what the hell was stolen, crushed, and deliberately sabotaged. This book exposes how democracy in the U.S. was murdered the moment Black folks tried to actually exercise it, and how whiteness chose racial solidarity over class freedom every single time. It’s the origin story of why this country is the way it is, and why “allyship” without structural betrayal of whiteness is a fairy tale.

    Then go read Frantz Fanon’s The Wretched of the Earth, because some of y’all are suffering from liberal delusion and need to confront how colonialism actually works on the psyche, the body, and the nervous system. Fanon explains how violence structures the world and how the colonized are shaped by it. This is for all the folks who think oppression is mostly about language and not about domination, land, labor, and terror. Some of Y’all have this fantasy that polite discourse and symbolic inclusion can undo racist systems forged in conquest and maintained by terror. It will strip away the comfort of believing that moral intention, rather than material power and organized resistance, is what has ever moved history.

    Next up is Sylvia Wynter’s On Being Human As Praxis because she dismantles the very category of “Man” that Western civilization is built on. This is some graduate-level deprogramming so get your attention span up. It shows how whiteness ain’t just prejudice, it’s a whole epistemological regime that decided who counts as human and who counts as disposable. This is for people who are ready to have their concept of reality wrecked AF, not just their manners corrected.

    Read Cedric Robinson’s Black Marxism, so you can understand racial capitalism as a system. Robinson shows how capitalism didn’t accidentally become racist but was born racial, matured racial, and still feeds on racial hierarchy. This book kills the fantasy that justice can exist without dismantling the economic order that requires racial stratification to function. This book destroys the myth that racism is some kind of glitch or side effect in an otherwise fair market rather than the being the market’s operating logic. You’ll walk away understanding that redistribution of resources, not symbolic progress, have always been the real price of racial justice.

    Then go read Saidiya Hartman’s Scenes of Subjection, because it forces readers to confront how spectacle, pleasure, and violence are braided together in the history of Black suffering, and how empathy itself can become a form of domination. This is for white people who want to “feel” without interrogating what their feeling is actually doing. You’ll see how easily compassion can coexist with consumption, voyeurism, and power. It will make it impossible to keep believing that having an emotional reaction is the same thing as challenging a system.

    Follow with Hortense Spillers’ Black, White, and in Color(or selected essays like “Mama’s Baby, Papa’s Maybe”), which surgically dissects how slavery ripped apart gender, kinship, and the very grammar of personhood for Black people. This is not inspirational book. You will not be able to keep pretending that repairing language or celebrating representation can heal a wound that was carved into the structure of social life itself.

    When you finish, then read Angela Davis’ Are Prisons Obsolete?because abolition is where all that ally cosplay goes to die. This book forces you to confront how punishment, surveillance, and cages are foundational to how the state manages Black life, and how “reform” is often just a softer costume for the same evil machinery.

    Then put Katherine McKittrick’s Demonic Groundsin your hands, so you can understand how geography, space, and mapping are tools of racial control. This is about how Black life has been historically placed, contained, erased, and rendered “out of bounds,” and how spatial order is racist by design.

    Read Ruth Wilson Gilmore’s Golden Gulag, which exposes how surplus land, surplus labor, and surplus punishment created the prison boom. It’s a master class in how racism, capitalism, and state violence operate together with chilling efficiency.

    Add to your list Christina Sharpe’s In the Wake: On Blackness and Being, because it teaches that slavery is not “over,” it is the damn weather. It is the atmospheric condition under which Black life still exists, shaping grief, survival, intimacy, and state violence. This book makes it impossible to keep talking about “the past” as if it’s not actively structuring the present tense.

    Read Orlando Patterson’s Slavery and Social Death, so you can understand that enslavement was not just labor theft, but the systematic annihilation of kinship, honor, ancestry, and legal personhood. This is the conceptual backbone for understanding why freedom in the U.S. has always been partial, conditional, and violently policed.

    Frank Wilderson’s Red, White & Black will introduce you to Afropessimism and force you to face a brutal idea that anti-Blackness isn’t just about bias or bad attitudes, it’s about how the modern world was built to treat Black people as disposable, as outside of full humanity itself. This book wrecks the comforting belief that you can fix a system like that with diversity, inclusion, or better representation. It will make you sit with the possibility that the problem isn’t that Black people were left out of the house, but that the house was built on their exclusion from the start.

    Add Jared Sexton’s Amalgamation Schemes, because it dismantles liberal multiculturalism and exposes how “coalition,” “diversity,” and “shared struggle” often function to erase the specificity of anti-Black violence. This is for white “allies” who love the word “we” without understanding how it’s used to flatten power.

    Read Simone Browne’s Dark Matters, which traces surveillance from the slave ship to the biometric database. It shows how the technologies used to track, measure, and control bodies were perfected on Black people long before they became “national security” tools. A big side eye to TSA, facial recognition, and data policing.

    Next up is Walter Rodney’s How Europe Underdeveloped Africa, so you can finally grasp that “global inequality” is not a natural outcome but the direct result of organized theft, extraction, and underdevelopment. This book demolishes the myth of Western benevolence and replaces it with receipts.

    Put Tiffany Lethabo King’s The Black Shoals in your hands, because it theorizes the deep entanglement of Black and Indigenous dispossession under settler colonialism and slavery. And it will force you to see how land theft and human theft are not separate histories but braided systems of world-making.

    After that, come back to Saidiya Hartman and read Wayward Lives, Beautiful Experiments, which refuses respectability politics and centers Black girls and women as theorists of freedom, desire, and refusal. Hartman teaches us that survival itself can be insurgent, and that the archive has always been hostile to Black interior life.

    Add Vijay Prashad’s The Darker Nations, to situate U.S. racial politics within a global history of empire, decolonization, and Third World solidarity. This is the book that shows whiteness is not just domestic supremacy but an international order maintained through war, debt, and ideology.

    We’re almost done.

    Read Walter Mignolo’s The Darker Side of Western Modernity, because it exposes how “progress,” “reason,” and “civilization” are inseparable from colonial conquest and epistemic violence. This book doesn’t ask white readers to question the very foundations of the knowledge system that produced them.

    And finally, because a lot of Y’all love to talk about “the future,” go read Achille Mbembe’s Necropolitics, which names the ultimate power of the modern state which power uses to decide who may live and who must die. This is a chilling book that ties together colonialism, policing, borders, war, and racialized abandonment into one coherent theory of disposable life.

    There! That’s 20 books total.

    A full-on decolonial, abolitionist, anti-capitalist, anti-innocence curriculum. Just history, structure, power, and the long, ugly-ass genealogy of how the modern world was built on racial terror and disposability. Y’all are gettin’ history, psychology, politics, economics, and the lie of innocence, all in one stack. Ain’t no mysticism. No “start with your heart.” No “we’re all learning.” Just the record, the systems, the bodies, and the truth.

    Now, if you say it’s “too intense,” “too academic,” “too angry,” or “not accessible,” then congratulations, you’ve just located the edge of your actual unlearning.

    And if Y’all still write me after this, it won’t be because you don’t know where to start. It’ll be because you want a Mammy to give you emotional validation, not transformation. And that ain’t my job.

    Get tuh readin’!

    Thanks for reading. If this piece resonated with you, then please consider becoming a paid subscriber. Paid subscriptions help keep my Substack unfiltered and ad free. They also help me raise money for HBCU journalism students who need laptops, DSLR cameras, tripods, mics, lights, software, travel funds for conferences and reporting trips, and food from our pantry. You can also follow me on Facebook!

    We appreciate you!

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    Dr. Stacey Patton

    Dr. Stacey Patton is an award-winning journalist, author, historian and nationally recognized child advocate whose research focuses on the intersections of race and parenting in American life, child welfare issues, education, corporal punishment in homes and schools, and the foster care and school-to-prison pipelines. Her writings on race, culture, higher education, and child welfare issues have appeared in The New York Times, Washington Post, BBC News, Al Jazeera, TheRoot.com, NewsOne, Madame Noire, and The Chronicle of Higher Education. She has appeared on ABC News, CNN, MSNBC, Al Jazeera, and Democracy Now. Dr. Patton is the author of That Mean Old Yesterday, Spare the Kids: Why Whupping Children Won't Save Black America, and the forthcoming books, Strung Up: The Lynching of Black Children in Jim Crow America, and Not My Cat, a children's story. She is also the creator of a forthcoming 3-D medical animation and child abuse prevention app called "When You Hit Me."

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    An Emergency Syllabus for White People Who Keep Asking: “Where Do I Start?”

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