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OverviewFor activists working for racial justice for decades, the year 2020 stood out from the rest. More people seemed to care about racism than ever before. Due to this unprecedented surge, was anything more accomplished than in prior efforts? Through interviews with uprising participants (a mix of first-time protesters and seasoned veterans; from both large cities and smaller towns), participant observation from three U.S. cities, and secondary data sources on U.S. and global 2020 protest actions, Eileen O’Brien documents what exactly was different about 2020 from a boots-on-the-ground vantage point. Participants in the uprising drew a sense of meaning being part of something larger than themselves and were able to grieve racist violence collectively during a lockdown. They also created beautiful protest art out of plywood made necessary by white supremacist counter-protesters’ destruction of local businesses. They toppled Confederate monuments and felt that sentences like Derek Chauvin’s murder conviction or the three killers of Ahmaud Arbery on federal hate crime charges were rare victories only made possible through their activism. Later, many went back to business as usual after 2020, broader societal antiracist changes proved elusive, and backlash was swift. Yet, cross-racial interest convergence occurred for a brief antiracist moment, and “the struggle itself was redemptive.” Full Product DetailsAuthor: Eileen O'BrienPublisher: University of Georgia Press Imprint: University of Georgia Press ISBN: 9780820373737ISBN 10: 0820373737 Pages: 228 Publication Date: 15 June 2025 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsBeautiful Solidarity, Symbolic Impacts is a wonderfully presented and engaging book that will make an important contribution to our understanding of contemporary racial justice activism and to the larger discussion of issues of racism and antiracism in the United States.--Woody Doane ""Professor of Sociology, University of Hartford"" Beautiful Solidarity, Symbolic Impacts is a wonderfully presented and engaging book that will make an important contribution to our understanding of contemporary racial justice activism and to the larger discussion of issues of racism and antiracism in the United States. -- Woody Doane * Professor of Sociology, University of Hartford * Beautiful Solidarity, Symbolic Impacts is a wonderfully presented and engaging book that will make an important contribution to our understanding of contemporary racial justice activism and to the larger discussion of issues of racism and antiracism in the United States. -- Woody Doane * professor of sociology, University of Hartford * Eileen O'Brien is a passionate and compassionate storyteller. In Beautiful Solidarity, Symbolic Impacts she poignantly tells the story of America's 2020 racial reckoning, covering both its great potential and its short fallings. Her deep knowledge of both history and humanity shines through this work, and her interview study with ‘boots on the ground’ participants in the Summer 2020 marches for racial justice will stand as an important testamentary document to a moment when the world not only watched persistent and egregious racialized violence in society but could no longer ignore it. In light of our current moment, this book is a must-read capable of illuminating the American past and present as well as the potential for the future inherent in ‘beautiful solidarity.’ -- Barbara Harris Combs * author of From Selma to Montgomery: The Long March to Freedom * Author InformationEILEEN O'BRIEN is professor of sociology at Saint Leo University, worldwide. She is the author or coauthor of several books, including The Racial Middle: Latinos and Asian Americans Living Beyond the Racial Divide, Whites Confront Racism: Antiracists and Their Paths to Action, and White Privilege: The Persistence of Racial Hierarchy in a Culture of Denial. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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