• Work
  • Contact
  • Instagram
A Word With Aramide
  • Work
  • Contact
  • Instagram

Between The World And Me creates a tapestry of history and art from Ta-Nehisi Coates’ words

With his critically acclaimed nonfiction work, Between The World And Me, Ta-Nehisi Coates laid himself bare. Writing the book as a letter to his then 15-year-old son, Coates unearthed memories from his boyhood in West Baltimore, then moved to his son’s birth and into the present day. Between The World And Me was published in 2015, just before Trump gave new life to the United States’ rotten core. In the years since, social media and the ubiquity of cameraphones has amplified Black death in the media. Police brutality, unyielding anti-Blackness, and an exhausting presidential election cycle have dominated our day-to-day lives. With history at his back and the events of his own Black life embedded in his memory, the journalist could not have predicted our current state when he first published his manuscript. Still, the author ended up pretty spot-on. Coates was brutally realistic about Black life, even then. In HBO’s film adaptation of the New York Times best-seller, his words echo across the screen, burrowing into our past and leaving hints about the future of Black America and this country.

Continue reading at The A.V. Club.

tags: Between the World and Me, Ta-Nehisi Coates, HBI, Kamilah Forbes, ahershala Ali, Angela Bassett, Angela Davis, Alicia Garza, Tip “T.I.” Harris, Jharrel Jerome, Janet Mock, Joe Morton, Wendell Pierce, Phylicia Rashad, MJ Rodriguez, Kendrick Sampson, Yara Shahidi, Courtney B. Vance, Olivia Washington, Pauletta Washington, Susan Kelechi Watson, Oprah Winfrey, The A.V. Club, chocoaltegirlreviews
categories: Film/TV, Culture
Wednesday 11.18.20
Posted by Aramide Tinubu
Newer / Older

Powered by Aramide Tinubu