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The Marginalized Majority

Claiming Our Power in a Post-Truth America

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
“This book is a daring intervention to get us back in the game—and a witty, delightfully personal meditation on collective power.” —Naomi Klein
 
The energy on the left has never been higher. But because there are so many issues to tackle, each one more urgent and divisive than the next, some say progressives will once again fail to seize the moment and gain real power. But what if we’re getting the story all wrong?
 
In The Marginalized Majority, Onnesha Roychoudhuri makes the galvanizing case that our plurality of identities is not only our greatest strength, but is also at the indisputable core of successful progressive change throughout history.
 
From the civil rights movement to the Women’s March, mainstream media to Saturday Night Live, Roychoudhuri illuminates how historical narratives are written and, by holding the myths about our disenfranchisement up to the light, reveals we have far more power than we’re often led to believe. With both clear-eyed hope and electrifying power, she examines our ideas about what’s possible, and what’s necessary—opening up space for action, new realities, and, ultimately, survival.
 
Now, Roychoudhuri urges us, is the time to fight like the majority we already are.
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    • Kirkus

      Starred review from May 1, 2018
      A stirring defense of "identity politics" and the need to reclaim narratives as well as a powerful account of the transformation of a journalist into an activist.The old adage says that the personal is political (and vice versa), and it is the personal that elevates this above the typical activist broadside. Roychoudhuri combines the reporting chops of an experienced journalist with literary flair and a conversational, common-sense approach that seems far more heartfelt than dogmatic. "My primary identity is not as a first-generation Indian-American," she writes, after recounting her frustrations with an agent interested in her fiction who suggested she make it more "Jhumpa Lahiri-sh." "I identity more as an ambiguously brown American--one who decided to learn Spanish in part because so many people assume I'm Latina." As such, the author establishes that she is emblematic of the "marginalized majority" in a country where appeals to reach the "average American" generally connote one who is white and male and where "working-class American" is similarly misrepresented given "the fact that the majority of the American working class is part of an ethnic or racial minority." Throughout, Roychoudhuri gives voice to those whose voices are too little heard. She finds great hope in "solidarity and intersectionality in protests," showing how #metoo, Black Lives Matter, Occupy Wall Street, and other movements of the supposedly marginalized have moved into the mainstream. "Marginalized Americans are at the heart of the movement," she writes. "And they always have been." Along the way, the author recounts her progression from a reporter more comfortable observing from the sidelines to an activist in the middle of the fray as she tackles myths of subjectivity and objectivity that can distort the reality.There have been plenty of books covering similar territory--and there will be many more in the years to come--but rarely are they as persuasive and engaging as this one.

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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