Notes for Nova
Some things I read on Tumblr, I'm like, "I need to share this with my daughter... in a couple years."

Maybe I'll print 'em all out in a book sometime, and give it to her for graduation.
May 31, 2012
blackcontemporaryart:

Glenn Ligon (b. 1960)
When Black Wasn’t Beautiful #1, 2004

blackcontemporaryart:

Glenn Ligon (b. 1960)

When Black Wasn’t Beautiful #1, 2004

(via guerrillamamamedicine)

lacigreen:

greguti:

Moment of ovulation accidentally photographed during a hysterectomy.
(Source: New Scientist, 2008)

This has got to be one of the coolest things I’ve seen on Tumblr!  BODIES ARE SO COOL.

lacigreen:

greguti:

Moment of ovulation accidentally photographed during a hysterectomy.

(Source: New Scientist, 2008)

This has got to be one of the coolest things I’ve seen on Tumblr!  BODIES ARE SO COOL.

Study finds TV can decrease self esteem in children, except white boys →

If you are a white girl, a black girl or a black boy, exposure to today’s electronic media in the long run tends to make you feel worse about yourself. If you’re a white boy, you’ll feel better, according to a new study led by an Indiana University professor.

Nicole Martins, an assistant professor of telecommunications in the IU College of Arts and Sciences, and Kristen Harrison, professor of communication studies at the University of Michigan, also found that black children in their study spent, on average, an extra 10 hours a week watching television.

“We can’t deny the fact that media has an influence when they’re spending most of their time — when they’re not in school — with the television,” Martins said.

Harrison added, “Children who are not doing other things besides watching television cannot help but compare themselves to what they see on the screen.”

Their paper has been published in Communication Research. Martins and Harrison surveyed a group of about 400 black and white preadolescent students in communities in the Midwest over a yearlong period. Rather than look at the impact of particular shows or genres, they focused on the correlation between the time in front of the TV and the impact on their self-esteem.

“Regardless of what show you’re watching, if you’re a white male, things in life are pretty good for you,” Martins said of characters on TV. “You tend to be in positions of power, you have prestigious occupations, high education, glamorous houses, a beautiful wife, with very little portrayals of how hard you worked to get there.

“If you are a girl or a woman, what you see is that women on television are not given a variety of roles,” she added. “The roles that they see are pretty simplistic; they’re almost always one-dimensional and focused on the success they have because of how they look, not what they do or what they think or how they got there.

“This sexualization of women presumably leads to this negative impact on girls.”

With regard to black boys, they are often criminalized in many programs, shown as hoodlums and buffoons, and without much variety in the kinds of roles they occupy.

“Young black boys are getting the opposite message: that there is not lots of good things that you can aspire to,” Martins said. “If we think about those kinds of messages, that’s what’s responsible for the impact.

“If we think just about the sheer amount of time they’re spending, and not the messages, these kids are spending so much time with the media that they’re not given a chance to explore other things they’re good at, that could boost their self-esteem.”

Martins said their study counters claims by producers that programs have been progressive in their depictions of under-represented populations. An earlier study co-authored by her and Harrison suggests that video games “are the worst offenders when it comes to representation of ethnicity and gender.”

Other research is starting to show the impacts of other kinds of entertainment sources, such as video games and hand-held devices. It indicates that young people are becoming creative at “media multitasking.”

“Even though these new technologies are becoming more available, kids still spend more time with TV than anything else,” Martins said.

Interestingly, the young people were asked about their consumption of print media, but the results were not statistically significant.

Martins conducted the research while she was completing her Ph.D. at the University of Illinois, as part of a larger longitudinal study done with her co-author, Harrison. They sought out certain school districts in Illinois because of their diversity, but African-Americans were the predominant minority group.

(Source: sparkamovement, via guerrillamamamedicine)

i am a person!: books by and about mixed people →

billierain:

Breasting the Waves: On Writing and Healing by Joanne Arnott

Fall on Your Knees by Ann-Marie MacDonald

Thinking Class: Sketches from a Cultural Worker by J. Kadi

Miscegenation Blues edited by Carol Camper

Racially Mixed People in America by Maria P. P. Root

Notes on A Scandal: As a Black Woman who is Mothering Black kids While Black...cuz I'm Black →

notesonascandal:

Y’all need to understand how DANGEROUS it is for us to allow our kids out the house even looking a LITTLE ashy/raggedy/disheveled/unkempt. It means that The People will come and take your kids from you. It means that some teacher or social worker at the school will assume that your home is a…

May 30, 2012
There are those who receive as birthright an adequate or at least unquestioned sense of self and those who set out to reinvent themselves, for survival or for satisfaction, and travel far. Some people inherit values and practices as a house they inhabit; some of us have to burn down that house, find our own ground, build from scratch, even as a psychological metamorphosis.
May 27, 2012
Sentimentality, the ostentatious parading of excessive and spurious emotion, is the mark of dishonesty, the inability to feel; the wet eyes of the sentimentalist betray his aversion to experience, his fear of life, his arid heart, and it is always, therefore, the signal of secret and violent inhumanity, the mask of cruelty.
May 21, 2012
We are sudden stars / You and I exploding in / Our blue black skins.
May 19, 2012
When we really see other people as they are without taking it personally, we can never be hurt by what they say or do. Even if others lie to you, it is okay. They are lying to you because they are afraid. They are afraid you will discover that they are not perfect. It is painful to take that social mask off.
May 17, 2012
One wants to tell a story, like Scheherezade, in order not to die. It’s one of the oldest urges in mankind. It’s a way of stalling death.