Ta-Nehisi Coates in conversation with Chris Jackson | One World Big Ideas Night

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  • Опубліковано 3 жов 2017
  • Ta-Nehisi Coates discusses his new book WE WERE EIGHT YEARS IN POWER with Chris Jackson, editor and publisher of One World books. Read more about the book here: bit.ly/2wxCE9U. Filmed at the One World Big Ideas Night in New York City, 10/4/17.
    About WE WERE EIGHT YEARS IN POWER
    In WE WERE EIGHT YEARS IN POWER, Coates takes us on a personal journey. Part memoir and part polemic, Coates’ new book combines Ta-Nehisi’s award-winning journalism with the more introspective storytelling of BETWEEN THE WORLD AND ME to illuminate what the Obama era has taught us about the heart of America and it’s unreconciled history. Coates powerfully examines the threads between the unprecedented election of Barack Obama and the vicious backlash that fueled the election of Donald Trump. He does so through his intimate and revealing perspective-the point of view of a young, black writer who begins his journey in an unemployment office in Harlem and ends it in the Oval Office, interviewing the President of The United States.
    About One World
    One World is the home of groundbreaking writers, thinkers, activists, and artists. Publishing the boldest, most original work from a diverse group of writers riveting narratives that disrupt the status quoe, challenge the dominant modes of thoughts and give us a new language to understand our past, imagine our future, and see our present in all its complexity.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 28

  • @lorenzoalvarez7254
    @lorenzoalvarez7254 6 років тому +14

    "it doesn't have to be this way - we made it this way" - profound beyond measure - going to read both his book AND Edmund Morgan's because of that comment. thank you!

  • @mahanmark0
    @mahanmark0 6 років тому +16

    Wow, he blows me away every time I hear him speak or read his work. He's one of the great intellectuals of today and tomorrow. Just reading the comments below it's apparent who is white, those folks full of themselves who can't and won't listen, don't care and refuse to be touched by this history and this present. Well, I'm white and I think this man is RIGHT. 100% right.

    • @NSResponder
      @NSResponder 2 роки тому

      Bullshit. He's not an intellectual at all, he's just a glib little guilt-peddler. Jordan Peterson is an intellectual, and Coates is snotty little prick who smears him for clickbait.

    • @missmattie1462
      @missmattie1462 2 роки тому +1

      Mark Mahan, thank you. I agree. 💯.

  • @RB-oz1mm
    @RB-oz1mm 6 років тому +6

    My favorite author. He has changed my concept of history (much as Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz has), and he has such a strong voice, poetry, research ability, and conviction as I have never read before. So grateful!

  • @feavouglan4427
    @feavouglan4427 6 років тому +9

    I love that he's inspired by hip hop!!!

  • @ogyaherd9667
    @ogyaherd9667 Рік тому

    amazing that his realization of the construct of race from the development of virginia law enactments echoes the earlier propositions & presentations of claude anderson! always knew he (dr anderson) had uncovered something startling!

  • @angelamarie5978
    @angelamarie5978 4 роки тому

    He's an amazing writer and intellectual. I look forward to reading all of your books.
    It feels like the embodiment of James Baldwin the way you break down whiteness not in the physical since but as an institution. I enjoy listening to you b/c your real.

  • @tomasc7621
    @tomasc7621 6 років тому

    "I'm NOT White! I'm Jew.Ish!"

  • @SevenRiderAirForce
    @SevenRiderAirForce 6 років тому +1

    I watched half an hour and he hasn't said much yet. He touched on race being socially constructed, but he didn't really go into anything. Is there anything in the remaining 40 minutes?

    • @x-man9473
      @x-man9473 6 років тому +1

      SevenRiderAirForce. You have to watch his other videos or read his book between the world and me. He usually explains in detail when the book is coming out. This is a year after the book came out. He is just reflecting the book to people who read it.

    • @SevenRiderAirForce
      @SevenRiderAirForce 6 років тому

      Okay I'll add it to my list. I tried watching some other videos but I can't find any where he talks about things concretely. He mentioned reparations in one, but when he was asked in the Q&A what it would look like, he didn't have an answer. He's popular, so I'm trying to find out what the substance is, because so far it just seems like "things were bad, they're still not the best, so we should do better. I have a vague plan and a positive attitude." Okay, well, go on. Anywho, I'll try reading the book.

  • @dimitrioskantakouzinos8590
    @dimitrioskantakouzinos8590 6 років тому

    WE WUZ EIGHT YEARS IN POWER!

  • @Noodles1771
    @Noodles1771 6 років тому +2

    I find it corny Coates took the title of his book from a Talib Kweli album. Further Coates' emphasis on identity to the exclusion of class, and capitalism underscores the shallowness of his knowledge and intellect. The notion that whiteness only existed with the dehumanization of black people ignores that class precedes race. The Irish or the Scottish didn't need a change in pigment to be ghettoized by the English. Otherness is a construct that can be based on any number of qualities color among them. Every time I see one of these videos with Coates it's never a real interrogation of his ideas, it's always an intoxicated romanticized rambling of anecdotes, and 'what it must be like to have written this, the response, process etc etc.' In other words vapid self-promotion.

    • @dsmith6035
      @dsmith6035 Рік тому

      Except he's not talking about the notion of "othering" or noting/noticing difference(s) as a universally human phenomena. He's essentially saying that race played a primary role in the bolstering of wealth in this country and that it was important to make a distinction between a White Indentured Servant and a Black slave - especially so that their treatment (the treatment of the slave) was acceptable among those who might, otherwise, oppose. Race, in America, is different than in many other places with respect to the history and role it's played/is playing. Additionally, he's writing and speaking from a Black persoective...so this notion that if he's going to talk about race, he has to do it from a White person's perspective is both ridiculous and NOT possible. If you're a non-White person in this country social class and race are inextricably tied together...and it all has root in our specific treatment of race in Anerica.

  • @maxs9742
    @maxs9742 6 років тому +3

    racist

    • @Critic_number_4
      @Critic_number_4 5 років тому

      he's not racist he's just angry and ill-informed.