Sublime
An inspiration engine for ideas
Julie Freyberg
@freebird
Earl “Shug” Davis,
James McBride • The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store: A Novel
Soledad Brother - George Jackson
Jordan
@jordan_gilman
Mitchell Anhoury
@mitchellanhoury
1. Donna Haraway, “A cyborg manifesto”, 1985
2. Audre Lorde, “The uses of the erotic: the erotic as power”, 1978
3. Susan Sontag, “The double standard of aging”, 1972
4. David Foster Wallace, “E Unibus Pluram Television and U.S. Fiction”
5. Joan Didion, “On self-respect, 1961
6. Toni Morrison, “The site of memory”, 1987
7. Zadie Smith, “Joy”, 2013
Angela Davis (1943–present) spent the next four decades opposing the racial discriminators who learned to hide their intent, denouncing those who promoted end-of-racism fairytales while advocating bipartisan tough-on-crime policies and a prison-industrial complex that engineered the mass incarceration, beatings, and killings of Black people by law
... See moreIbram X. Kendi • Stamped from the Beginning: The Definitive History of Racist Ideas in America

On television I caught glimpses of the heroes of the Black Power movement. Muhammad Ali, Stokley Carmichael and Yuri Kochiyama were all preaching about the condition of black people, and Angela Davis was still regarded as the most dangerous person in the USA.