Rebirth of a Nation: Reparations and Remaking America

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(as of Aug 24, 2024 20:04:37 UTC – Details)



Joel Edward Goza dismantles the deep-seated myths that perpetuate white supremacy—and makes the case that reparations are necessary to heal America’s racial wounds and live up to our democratic ideals. 
 
Like many well-intentioned white people, Goza once believed that he could support Black America’s struggle for equality without supporting reparations. Reparations, he thought, were altogether irrelevant to the real work of racial justice. 
 
This is a book about why he was wrong. In fact, any effort to heal our nation’s wounds will fail without reparations. 
 
In Rebirth of a Nation, Goza exposes lesser-known aspects of racism in American history and how Black people have consistently been depicted as responsible for their own oppression to justify slavery, Jim Crow, mass incarceration and gross inequality. Goza’s iconoclastic and incisive account exposes how revered figures like Thomas Jefferson and Abraham Lincoln embedded white supremacy deep into our nation’s consciousness—and how Ronald Reagan manipulated this ideology so that society cheered as he advanced a set of policies that wounded our nation and intensified Black America’s suffering. 

But Rebirth of a Nation is not merely about accountability. It is also about hope. A reparations process is not a utopian dream; Goza offers a practical path toward closing the racial wealth gap. Rebirth of a Nation shows readers how they can join the reparative process, working toward the creation of a more perfect union.

From the Publisher

By embracing reparations, we can place the US on a path of healing.By embracing reparations, we can place the US on a path of healing.

What People are Saying

Endorsement from Mary Frances BerryEndorsement from Mary Frances Berry

Endorsement from Michelle DusterEndorsement from Michelle Duster

Endorsement from Keisha N. BlainEndorsement from Keisha N. Blain

Excerpt from the Preface

Reparations offers an opportunity to salvage our history and pull an antiracist future from a remarkably racist past. Implementing that opportunity depends on the ability to reimagine how different America’s story could and should be. For this reimagining, Rebirth of a Nation uses as guides through each racial era the wisdom and witness of Black activists, writers, and intellectuals of the Black Freedom Movement who continually wooed America toward an interracial and egalitarian democracy. The Black historian Vincent Harding envisioned this tradition as a river traveling through time and space. “The river of black struggle is people,” Harding wrote, “but it is also the hope, the movement, the transformative power that humans create and that creates them, us, and makes them, us, new persons.”

As white supremacy evolved and re-created itself, so did the Black Freedom Movement. Never one-dimensional or monolithic, the river always consists of currents and crosscurrents. The tactics of Frederick Douglass were not the tactics of Ida B. Wells; Martin Luther King Jr.’s strategy differed from Stokely Carmichael’s; and today, William Barber III’s work differs from Stacey Abrams’s. Yet, the revolutionary work that unites Douglass, Wells, King, Carmichael, Barber, and Abrams is the shared mission to make Black lives matter through the fight to create an interracial and egalitarian democracy.

Black activists, writers, and intellectuals have revealed white supremacy as much more than a war against Black America. Black people have consistently painted white supremacy as an insanity that wars against America’s soul and every tenet of democracy, human dignity, and equality—an insanity void of compassion for the needs most Americans hold in common.

By rejecting white supremacy, it has been Black activists, writers, and researchers who have challenged America to see an expansive and poignant spectrum of political possibilities. The Black Freedom Movement sees through America’s self-deception to the radical possibilities within American democracy simply because Black activists, writers, and researchers know that Black people are merely and yet wholly human. That one truth uncovers the lies that limit our life together. The world has yet to experience an egalitarian, interracial, antiracist democracy. And yet it is precisely this radical vision that many Black communities have sought to nurture and empower throughout our nation’s life together.

As we listen to our guides, we may come to recognize that our racial nightmare continues not because we lack practical ways to address America’s racial crisis but because we have continually rejected Black wisdom. In the days of slavery, we rejected the wisdom of the enslaved. In the days of segregation, we rejected the wisdom of the community Jim Crow sought to lynch. Today, to reject America’s need for reparations and a national rebirth is not only to reject the wisdom of today’s Black Freedom Movement but also to reject the collective wisdom of Sojourner Truth, Frederick Douglass, Harriet Tubman, Callie House, Ida B. Wells, W. E. B. Du Bois, Queen Mother Moore, Martin Luther King Jr., Stokely Carmichael, and John Lewis. This is the line through which the river of Black America’s struggle flows toward the work of reparations.

Throughout our history, resistance to racial justice and Black wisdom has depended on deceptive framing, racial logics, historical amnesia, and superficial thinking. What those committed to resisting Black justice could never afford is a serious public conversation about America’s racial history and a vulnerable public consideration of pragmatic public policies to begin reversing the way white America’s indifference perpetuates Black America’s suffering. And this is particularly true regarding the rejection of reparations. As Guy Emerson Mount writes, “America seems intent on a reparations policy driven [by] a popular Simpsons meme: ‘We’ve tried nothing, and we’re all out of ideas.’”

But reparations is not a utopian dream. It is practical, pragmatic, and long-game politics to begin healing our nation from hundreds of years of our traumatic racial history. Reparations is about resurrecting liberty, justice, and equality in a land where these democratic possibilities were killed long before they were ever born. It is the work to harmonize our life together with the demands of human decency, dignity, and democracy. Repentance, repayment, and repair: this is the work of reparations. Reimagining our past and future: this is the work of reparations. Providing a path to an antiracist and interracial democracy: this is the work of reparations. Reparations is about healing our racial wounds and a rare opportunity for our nation to begin anew.

Image of author Joel GozaImage of author Joel Goza

Author Bio

Joel Edward Goza is a writer, speaker, and community advocate who serves as a professor of ethics and the director of academic partnerships at the HBCU Simmons College of Kentucky. Before focusing on writing and teaching, Joel worked in urban redevelopment and community activism for over a decade in Houston’s Fifth Ward. He is also the author of America’s Unholy Ghosts: The Racist Roots of Our Faith and Politics, and contributes to The Hill, Salon, and Religion News Service.

Publisher ‏ : ‎ Eerdmans (September 24, 2024)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 344 pages
ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0802884318
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0802884312
Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.74 pounds
Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6 x 1 x 9 inches

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