How to Be an Antiracist

by

Ibram X. Kendi

Teachers and parents! Our Teacher Edition on How to Be an Antiracist makes teaching easy.
Antiracism is the opposite of racism: it’s a set of policies and ideas that creates and supports racial equity (whereas racism produces and defends racial inequity). But just like racial inequity comes from racist policies (not just racist ideas), racial equity must come from antiracist policies.

Antiracism Quotes in How to Be an Antiracist

The How to Be an Antiracist quotes below are all either spoken by Antiracism or refer to Antiracism. For each quote, you can also see the other terms and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Racism vs. Antiracism Theme Icon
).
Racist Introduction Quotes

What's the problem with being “not racist”? It is a claim that signifies neutrality: “I am not a racist, but neither am I aggressively against racism.” But there is no neutrality in the racism struggle. The opposite of “racist” isn't “not racist.” It is “antiracist.” What's the difference? One endorses either the idea of a racial hierarchy as a racist, or racial equality as an antiracist. One either believes problems are rooted in groups of people, as a racist, or locates the roots of problems in power and policies, as an antiracist. One either allows racial inequities to persevere, as a racist, or confronts racial inequities, as an antiracist.

Related Characters: Dr. Ibram X. Kendi (speaker)
Page Number: 9
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 1: Definitions Quotes

Definitions anchor us in principles. This is not a light point: If we don't do the basic work of defining the kind of people we want to be in language that is stable and consistent, we can't work toward stable, consistent goals. Some of my most consequential steps toward being an antiracist have been the moments when I arrived at basic definitions. To be an antiracist is to set lucid definitions of racism/antiracism, racist/antiracist policies, racist/antiracist ideas, racist/antiracist people. To be a racist is to constantly redefine racist in a way that exonerates one's changing policies, ideas, and personhood.

Related Characters: Dr. Ibram X. Kendi (speaker)
Page Number: 17
Explanation and Analysis:

“Racist” and “antiracist” are like peelable name tags that are placed and replaced based on what someone is doing or not doing, supporting or expressing in each moment. These are not permanent tattoos. No one becomes a racist or antiracist. We can only strive to be one or the other. We can unknowingly strive to be a racist. We can knowingly strive to be an antiracist. Like fighting an addiction, being an antiracist requires persistent self-awareness, constant self-criticism, and regular self-examination.

Related Characters: Dr. Ibram X. Kendi (speaker)
Page Number: 23
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 2: Dueling Consciousness Quotes

History duels: the undeniable history of antiracist progress, the undeniable history of racist progress. Before and after the Civil War, before and after civil rights, before and after the first Black presidency, the White consciousness duels. The White body defines the American body. The White body segregates the Black body from the American body. The White body instructs the Black body to assimilate into the American body. The White body rejects the Black body assimilating into the American body—and history and consciousness duel anew.

Related Characters: Dr. Ibram X. Kendi (speaker)
Page Number: 33
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 3: Power Quotes

I do not pity my seven-year-old self for identifying racially as Black. I still identify as Black. Not because I believe Blackness, or race, is a meaningful scientific category but because our societies, our policies, our ideas, our histories, and our cultures have rendered race and made it matter. I am among those who have been degraded by racist ideas, suffered under racist policies, and who have nevertheless endured and built movements and cultures to resist or at least persist through this madness.

Related Characters: Dr. Ibram X. Kendi (speaker)
Page Number: 37-8
Explanation and Analysis:

Prince Henry's racist policy of slave trading came first—a cunning invention for the practical purpose of bypassing Muslim traders. After nearly two decades of slave trading, King Afonso asked Gomes de Zurara to defend the lucrative commerce in human lives, which he did through the construction of a Black race, an invented group upon which he hung racist ideas. This cause and effect—a racist power creates racist policies out of raw self-interest; the racist policies necessitate racist ideas to justify them—lingers over the life of racism.

Related Characters: Dr. Ibram X. Kendi (speaker)
Page Number: 42
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 4: Biology Quotes

There is no such thing as racial ancestry. Ethnic ancestry does exist. Camara Jones, a prominent medical researcher of health disparities, explained it this way to bioethics scholar Dorothy Roberts: “People are born with ancestry that comes from their parents but are assigned a race.” People from the same ethnic groups that are native to certain geographic regions typically share the same genetic profile. Geneticists call them “populations.” When geneticists compare these ethnic populations, they find there is more genetic diversity between populations within Africa than between Africa and the rest of the world. Ethnic groups in Western Africa are more genetically similar to ethnic groups in Western Europe than to ethnic groups in Eastern Africa. Race is a genetic mirage.

Related Characters: Dr. Ibram X. Kendi (speaker)
Page Number: 53
Explanation and Analysis:

Terminating racial categories is potentially the last, not the first, step in the antiracist struggle. […] To be antiracist is to also recognize the living, breathing reality of this racial mirage, which makes our skin colors more meaningful than our individuality. To be antiracist is to focus on ending the racism that shapes the mirages, not to ignore the mirages that shape people’s lives.

Related Characters: Dr. Ibram X. Kendi (speaker)
Page Number: 54-5
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 5: Ethnicity Quotes

How can I get upset at immigrants from Africa and South America for looking down on African Americans when African Americans have historically looked down on immigrants from Africa and South America? How can I critique their ethnic racism and ignore my ethnic racism? That is the central double standard in ethnic racism: loving one’s position on the ladder above other ethnic groups and hating one's position below that of other ethnic groups. It is angrily trashing the racist ideas about one's own group but happily consuming the racist ideas about other ethnic groups. It is failing to recognize that racist ideas we consume about others came from the same restaurant and the same cook who used the same ingredients to make different degrading dishes for us all.

Related Characters: Dr. Ibram X. Kendi (speaker)
Page Number: 65-6
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 7: Culture Quotes

Enslaved Africans formulated new languages in nearly every European colony in the Americas […] In every one of these countries, racist power—those in control of government, academia, education, and media—has demeaned these African languages as dialects, as “broken” or “improper” or “nonstandard” French, Spanish, Dutch, Portuguese, or English. Assimilationists have always urged Africans in the Americas to forget the “broken” languages of our ancestors and master the apparently “fixed” languages of Europeans—to speak “properly.” […] The idea that Black languages outside Africa are broken is as culturally racist as the idea that languages inside Europe are fixed.

Related Characters: Dr. Ibram X. Kendi (speaker)
Page Number: 83
Explanation and Analysis:

To be antiracist is to see all cultures in all their differences as on the same level, as equals. When we see cultural difference, we are seeing cultural difference—nothing more, nothing less.

Related Characters: Dr. Ibram X. Kendi (speaker)
Page Number: 91
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 8: Behavior Quotes

To be an antiracist is to recognize there is no such thing as racial behavior. To be an antiracist is to recognize there is no such thing as Black behavior, let alone irresponsible Black behavior. Black behavior is as fictitious as Black genes. There is no “Black gene.” No one has ever scientifically established a single “Black behavioral trait.” No evidence has ever been produced, for instance, to prove that Black people are louder, angrier, nicer, funnier, lazier, less punctual, more immoral, religious, or dependent; that Asians are more subservient; that Whites are greedier. All we have are stories of individual behavior. But individual stories are only proof of the behavior of individuals. Just as race doesn’t exist biologically, race doesn’t exist behaviorally.

Related Characters: Dr. Ibram X. Kendi (speaker)
Page Number: 95
Explanation and Analysis:

The use of standardized tests to measure aptitude and intelligence is one of the most effective racist policies ever devised to degrade Black minds and legally exclude Black bodies. We degrade Black minds every time we speak of an “academic-achievement gap” based on these numbers. The acceptance of an academic-achievement gap is just the latest method of reinforcing the oldest racist idea: Black intellectual inferiority. The idea of an achievement gap means there is a disparity in academic performance between groups of students; implicit in this idea is that academic achievement as measured by statistical instruments like test scores and dropout rates is the only form of academic “achievement.” There is an even more sinister implication in achievement-gap talk—that disparities in academic achievement accurately reflect disparities in intelligence among racial groups. Intellect is the linchpin of behavior, and the racist idea of the achievement gap is the linchpin of behavioral racism.

Related Characters: Dr. Ibram X. Kendi (speaker)
Page Number: 101-2
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 10: White Quotes

Whenever someone classifies people of European descent as biologically, culturally, or behaviorally inferior, whenever someone says there is something wrong with White people as a group, someone is articulating a racist idea.
The only thing wrong with White people is when they embrace racist ideas and policies and then deny their ideas and policies are racist. This is not to ignore that White people have massacred and enslaved millions of indigenous and African peoples, colonized and impoverished millions of people of color around the globe as their nations grew rich, all the while producing racist ideas that blame the victims. This is to say their history of pillaging is not the result of the evil genes or cultures of White people. There’s no such thing as White genes. We must separate the warlike, greedy, bigoted, and individualist cultures of modern empire and racial capitalism (more on that later) from the cultures of White people.

Related Characters: Dr. Ibram X. Kendi (speaker)
Page Number: 128
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 11: Black Quotes

Racist ideas are constantly produced to cage the power of people to resist. Racist ideas make Black people believe White people have all the power, elevating them to gods. And so Black segregationists lash out at these all-powerful gods as fallen devils, as I did in college, while Black assimilationists worship their all-powerful White angels, strive to become them, to curry their favor, reproducing their racist ideas and defending their racist policies.

Related Characters: Dr. Ibram X. Kendi (speaker)
Page Number: 142
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 12: Class Quotes

To love capitalism is to end up loving racism. To love racism is to end up loving capitalism. The conjoined twins are two sides of the same destructive body. The idea that capitalism is merely free markets, competition, free trade, supplying and demanding, and private ownership of the means of production operating for a profit is as whimsical and ahistorical as the White-supremacist idea that calling something racist is the primary form of racism. Popular definitions of capitalism, like popular racist ideas, do not live in historical or material reality. Capitalism is essentially racist; racism is essentially capitalist. They were birthed together from the same unnatural causes, and they shall one day die together from unnatural causes. Or racial capitalism will live into another epoch of theft and rapacious inequity, especially if activists naïvely fight the conjoined twins independently, as if they are not the same.

Related Characters: Dr. Ibram X. Kendi (speaker)
Page Number: 163
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 13: Space Quotes

King’s nightmare is a product of the dueling Brown decision. The court rightly undermined the legitimacy of segregated White spaces that hoard public resources, exclude all non-Whites, and are wholly dominated by White peoples and cultures. But the court also reinforced the legitimacy of integrated White spaces that hoard public resources, include some non-Whites, and are generally, though not wholly, dominated by White peoples and cultures. White majorities, White power, and White culture dominate both the segregated and the integrated, making both White. But the unspoken veil claims there is no such thing as integrated White spaces, or for that matter integrated Black spaces that are underresourced, include some non-Blacks, and are generally, though not wholly, dominated by Black peoples and cultures. The court ruled Black spaces, segregated or integrated, inherently unequal and inferior.

Related Characters: Dr. Ibram X. Kendi (speaker), Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
Page Number: 177-8
Explanation and Analysis:

The logical conclusion of antiracist strategy is open and equal access to all public accommodations, open access to all integrated White spaces, integrated Middle Eastern spaces, integrated Black spaces, integrated Latinx spaces, integrated Native spaces, and integrated Asian spaces that are as equally resourced as they are culturally different. All these spaces adjoin civic spaces of political and economic and cultural power, from a House of Representatives to a school board to a newspaper editorial board where no race predominates, where shared antiracist power predominates. This is diversity, something integrationists value only in name.

Related Characters: Dr. Ibram X. Kendi (speaker)
Page Number: 180
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 15: Sexuality Quotes

I gobbled up Audre Lorde, E. Patrick Johnson, bell hooks, Joan Morgan, Dwight McBride, Patricia Hill Collins, and Kimberlé Crenshaw like my life depended on it. My life did depend on it. I wanted to overcome my gender racism, my queer racism. But I had to be willing to do for Black women and queer Blacks what I had been doing for Black men and Black heterosexuals, which meant first of all learning more—and then defending them like my heroes had.

Related Characters: Dr. Ibram X. Kendi (speaker), Kaila and Yaba
Page Number: 198-9
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 16: Failure Quotes

To understand why racism lives is to understand the history of antiracist failure—why people have failed to create antiracist societies. To understand the racial history of failure is to understand failed solutions and strategies. To understand failed solutions and strategies is to understand their cradles: failed racial ideologies.

Related Characters: Dr. Ibram X. Kendi (speaker)
Page Number: 201-2
Explanation and Analysis:

The problem of race has always been at its core the problem of power, not the problem of immorality or ignorance.

Related Characters: Dr. Ibram X. Kendi (speaker)
Page Number: 208
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 18: Survival Quotes

Over time, the source of racist ideas became obvious, but I had trouble acknowledging it. The source did not fit my conception of racism, my racial ideology, my racial identity. I became a college professor to educate away racist ideas, seeing ignorance as the source of racist ideas, seeing racist ideas as the source of racist policies, seeing mental change as the principal solution, seeing myself, an educator, as the primary solver.

Related Characters: Dr. Ibram X. Kendi (speaker), Sadiqa
Related Symbols: Cancer
Page Number: 229
Explanation and Analysis:

Racism is one of the fastest-spreading and most fatal cancers humanity has ever known. It is hard to find a place where its cancer cells are not dividing and multiplying. There is nothing I see in our world today, in our history giving me hope that one day antiracists will win the fight, that one day the flag of antiracism will fly over a world of equity. What gives me hope is a simple truism. Once we lose hope, we are guaranteed to lose. But if we ignore the odds and fight to create an antiracist world, then we give humanity a chance to one day survive, a chance to live in communion, a chance to be forever free.

Related Characters: Dr. Ibram X. Kendi (speaker)
Related Symbols: Cancer
Page Number: 238
Explanation and Analysis:
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Antiracism Term Timeline in How to Be an Antiracist

The timeline below shows where the term Antiracism appears in How to Be an Antiracist. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Racist Introduction
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The History of Racist Ideas and Policies Theme Icon
...Rather, people can be racist (which means that they believe in a racial hierarchy) or antiracist (which means that they believe that racial groups are fundamentally equal). Racists blame people for... (full context)
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 “Racist” and “antiracist” are descriptive terms for people’s behavior, not permanent identities for people themselves. People are capable... (full context)
Chapter 1: Definitions
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Dr. Kendi lays out his definitions of racism and antiracism: someone is being racist if their actions, inaction, or expression of racist ideas supports racist... (full context)
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...grew up with this liberation-focused definition of Christianity, and he can trace his understanding of antiracism directly back to it. While often overlooked, defining key terms is an essential first step... (full context)
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Racist policies promote or maintain inequity, while antiracist policies promote or maintain equity. Every policy does one or the other, whether it’s a... (full context)
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...that it isn’t: if discrimination creates inequity, it’s racist. But if discrimination creates equity, it’s antiracist. “Race-neutral” people who argue against all discrimination actually pose the greatest obstacle to racial equity:... (full context)
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Having defined racial equities and inequities, racist and antiracist policies, and racist and antiracist ideas, Kendi returns to his original definitions. Racism is a... (full context)
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...everywhere in contemporary America. People either reinforce them or fight them—they are either racist or antiracist. But Kendi believes that these labels are fluid: whether someone is being racist or antiracist... (full context)
Chapter 2: Dueling Consciousness
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Kendi defines the terms assimilationism and segregationism as they relate to antiracism. Assimilationists think that certain groups are inferior and thus try to change those groups and... (full context)
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The History of Racist Ideas and Policies Theme Icon
...eyes and through the gaze of mainstream white society, and they struggled to choose between antiracism and assimilationism. But Kendi points out that assimilationism is racist: it suggests that one racial... (full context)
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...groups, while segregationist policies try to subordinate, isolate, or destroy them. On the other hand, antiracist policies assume that everyone is “already civilized” and try to foster racial equity. (full context)
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The duel between white segregationism and assimilationism, like the duel between Black assimilationism and antiracism, has played out throughout history. There has been “antiracist progress” as well as “racist progress.”... (full context)
Chapter 4: Biology
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...biological differences among racial groups, which justify ranking them in a hierarchy of value. Biological antiracists, on the other hand, reject the idea that racial differences are biological or genetic. (full context)
Chapter 5: Ethnicity
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Kendi defines ethnic racism and ethnic antiracism, which involve policies and ideas that create inequities among “racialized ethnic groups,” not just races. (full context)
Chapter 6: Body
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A bodily racist sees certain racialized bodies as animalistic and violent, while a bodily antiracist insists on “humanizing, deracializing, and individualizing” people’s behavior. (full context)
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...nor will assimilationist “tough love” policies that seek to “civilize” people whom they consider inferior. Antiracists fight the true cause of higher crime rates in certain Black urban areas: a lack... (full context)
Chapter 7: Culture
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...racial groups, which they hold to some standard of superior or supreme culture. A cultural antiracist rejects the idea that one culture can be better than another. (full context)
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...In other words, they measure culture against a standard, which creates a hierarchy of cultures. Antiracists reject such standards, but segregationists and assimilationists uphold them. Segregationists think that other cultures can... (full context)
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...or 18th-century Europeans judging the rest of the world by their own cultural standards. Cultural antiracism simply means cultural relativism: we can see the differences among different cultures without thinking that... (full context)
Chapter 8: Behavior
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...someone who conflates the behavior of individuals with that of entire racial groups. A behavioral antiracist understands that “racial group behavior” is a totally fictional concept. (full context)
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...contest. His speech was full of classic behavioral racist ideas. But now, he understands that antiracism requires that we “deracialize behavior” and treat it as a purely individual phenomenon. Angela loved... (full context)
Chapter 9: Color
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...of policies and supporting ideas that sustain inequities between light-skinned and dark-skinned people, while color antiracism supports equity between them. (full context)
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...textures and larger facial features. Although inequity across color lines (or colorism) is often forgotten, antiracists must recognize and address it. There are clear disparities between light and dark-skinned Black people... (full context)
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...aren’t “Black enough.” But just like race, lightness and darkness have no biological basis. Real antiracism isn’t about flipping beauty standards around, but rather about diversifying them, like our ideas of... (full context)
Chapter 10: White
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Antiracist people recognize that white people have killed, impoverished, and enslaved many millions of people around... (full context)
Chapter 11: Black
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...power. This is actually a racist idea that lets powerful people of color avoid taking antiracist action and diminishes the power that lack people do have (while exaggerating white people’s power).... (full context)
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...are “not racist,” which is impossible—according to Kendi’s definition of racism, they’re either racist or antiracist. (full context)
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...returns to his conversation with the newspaper editor, who shuts down his column. As the antiracist voice in Kendi’s dueling consciousness starts winning out over the assimilationist one, he adds a... (full context)
Chapter 12: Class
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...racist as someone who racializes certain socioeconomic groups or supports racial capitalist policies. Meanwhile, an antiracist anti-capitalist opposes racial capitalism. (full context)
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...with racist ideas about certain groups, and these ideas then support elitist and racist policies. Antiracists respond to class racist concepts like “white trash” and “ghetto Blacks” by insisting that these... (full context)
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Kendi concludes that antiracists cannot address racial inequities without also being anti-capitalists, and anti-capitalists cannot address class inequities without... (full context)
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...acting in a racist way: he wanted the neighborhood to make him more Black. Genuine antiracism, however, requires seeing poor and elite Black culture as equals. Like many Black scholars, Kendi... (full context)
Chapter 13: Space
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...and supporting ideas that create inequities among different racialized spaces or eliminate protected spaces. Space antiracism is the set of policies and ideas that promotes racial equity in both integrated and... (full context)
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...Americans, Kendi’s uncle wrongly assumed that only white spaces counted as “the real world.” But antiracists know that there are multiple real worlds. (full context)
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...to be integrated this way, they would make every space a white space. In contrast, antiracists think everyone should have “open and equal access” to different spaces, but that all groups... (full context)
Chapter 14: Gender
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...people of different race-genders (groups defined by both race and gender, like Black women). Gender antiracism, on the other hand, leads to equity among race-genders. (full context)
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...intertwine to create gendered racism. Kimberlé Crenshaw developed the concept of “intersectionality” to explain why antiracist movements must also fight sexism, and vice versa. Kendi offers some examples of gendered racism:... (full context)
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Kendi quotes Kimberlé Crenshaw’s call for feminism and antiracism to address the intersections of gender and race. Black women built an activist movement around... (full context)
Chapter 15: Sexuality
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Queer antiracists refuse to believe in a hierarchy of race-sexualities and try to undo inequities among them.... (full context)
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Kendi reflects on how Yaba and Kaila influenced him. They taught him that antiracism is impossible without defending women and queer people of color, and they showed him how... (full context)
Chapter 16: Failure
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Kendi argues that understanding racism requires explaining why antiracism has failed in the past. He’s tried to do this throughout the book, like by... (full context)
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Kendi remembers a dinner date with his girlfriend Sadiqa, an easygoing, brilliant, antiracist doctor. On their date, they saw a white man grotesquely fondle a statue of the... (full context)
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...white people, until he eventually realized that the facts did not persuade anyone. But white antiracist leaders continued to believe the same thing for decades, and even today, many people wrongly... (full context)
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...but his strategy was the opposite: it helped people do nothing and reject change. Genuine antiracism isn’t about purity, it’s about courage—which means responding to fear with strength, when racist power... (full context)
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...But demonstrations usually fail, and the most they can do is “help people find the antiracist power within,” which means helping them understand their own racism, learn to see different races... (full context)
Chapter 17: Success
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Kendi describes what a successful antiracist future would look like: power and policies would be antiracist, not racist; there would be... (full context)
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...was misguided: he replaced Watkins’s self-serving metaphor with one that served him. Even as an antiracist, in other words, he was totally closedminded and hypocritical. (full context)
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...of these policies and racist ideas—in part because of his upbringing. Kendi then recognized what antiracism requires: developing antiracist power, recognizing the intersections between racism and other forms of oppression, and... (full context)
Chapter 18: Survival
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...receiving his diagnosis, Kendi had trouble accepting that he was probably going to die. But antiracism helped him understand: just like he had serious cancer and would probably die, but could... (full context)
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...we can address racial inequities by dedicating public resources and time to fighting racist policy. Antiracist policy is like chemotherapy, and education and public discourse can help society stay healthy and... (full context)
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First, though, it’s necessary to believe that an antiracist society is possible. Racism is only a 600-year-old power construct, and while it’s vicious and... (full context)