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Jackson 1964
Jackson 1964: And Other Dispatches from Fifty Years of Reporting on Race in America | Calvin Trillin
6 posts | 4 read | 13 to read
From bestselling author and beloved New Yorker writer Calvin Trillin, a deeply resonant, career-spanning collection of articles on race and racism, from the 1960s to the present In the early sixties, Calvin Trillin got his start as a journalist covering the Civil Rights Movement in the South. Over the next five decades of reporting, he often returned to scenes of racial tension. Now, for the first time, the best of Trillin's pieces on race in America have been collected in one volume. In the title essay of Jackson, 1964, we experience Trillin's riveting coverage of the pathbreaking voter registration drive known as the Mississippi Summer Project--coverage that includes an unforgettable airplane conversation between Martin Luther King, Jr., and a young white man sitting across the aisle. ("I'd like to be loved by everyone," King tells him, "but we can't always wait for love.") In the years that follow, Trillin rides along with the National Guard units assigned to patrol black neighborhoods in Wilmington, Delaware; reports on the case of a black homeowner accused of manslaughter in the death of a white teenager in an overwhelmingly white Long Island suburb; and chronicles the remarkable fortunes of the Zulu Social Aid & Pleasure Club, a black carnival krewe in New Orleans whose members parade on Mardi Gras in blackface. He takes on issues that are as relevant today as they were when he wrote about them. Excessive sentencing is examined in a 1970 piece about a black militant in Houston serving thirty years in prison for giving away one marijuana cigarette. The role of race in the use of deadly force by police is highlighted in a 1975 article about an African American shot by a white policeman in Seattle. Uniting all these pieces are Trillin's unflinching eye and graceful prose. Jackson, 1964 is an indispensable account of a half-century of race and racism in America, through the lens of a master journalist and writer who was there to bear witness. Advance praise for Jackson, 1964 "An exceptional collection [from] master essayist Trillin . . . exposing through perceptive observations and nuanced humor the insidious nature of discriminatory practices."--Booklist (starred review) "Trillin, a regular contributor to the New Yorker since 1963, collects his insights and musings on race in America in previously published essays from over fifty years of reporting. . . . What's shocking is how topical and relatively undated many of these essays seem today."--Publishers Weekly (starred review) "The author of some thirty titles, Trillin revisits the last half-century's racial struggles in various regions of the country, and readers are likely to come away thinking, 'so much has not really changed all that much.' . . . Haunting pieces that show how our window on the past is often a mirror."--Kirkus Reviews Praise for Calvin Trillin "That rarity, reportage as art."--The New York Times "[A writer] of painterly, impeccably crafted journalism."--People "Trillin is perhaps the finest reporter in America."--The Miami Herald "If Truman Capote invented the nonfiction novel, as he claimed, and Norman Mailer devised variations on it, Trillin has perfected the nonfiction short story; moreover, his craftsmanship can contend with that of either Capote or Mailer at their best."--Kirkus Reviews
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Fancypants
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Mehso-so

So I don't know how to feel about this book. It really didn't read like articles like I thought it would. It contains a lot of history but it doesn't all intersect. It was both saddening and eye opening to see some similarities in the stories from the past to things now. Sooo.....yeah.

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HillaryCopsey
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This is MLK speaking to a young white man.

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HillaryCopsey
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I don't normally read two books at once, but maybe it's appropriate here.

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BookishFeminist
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? This was written in 1975. Let that sink in. This article easily could have been written today. 5 years ago. 10. 20. 30.

All this time has passed and our rhetoric hasn't even changed. That's sobering.

This is from the article "Causes and Circumstances" in this book. It discusses a black man who was pulled over in Seattle in 1975 and frisked under suspicion of committing robbery, then killed. ??

#BLM #BlackLivesMatter ✊?✊?✊?

TheNextBook @BookishFeminist I honestly don't even know what to say anymore. Everybody doesnt want equality and that's just the truth. Any struggle for justice is seen as being racist on black people's part. I've realized that equality to some people are a threat. As is diveristy. I realized that when I saw a pic of a billboard saying "diversity is white genocide." America has a long way to go. 8y
TheNextBook *is a threat 8y
BookishFeminist @TheNextBook 🙌🏼🙌🏼 (feels weird doing that but I agree 1000000%) It's sickening. Some people just want to see the success and equality of others as a threat to themselves when it's anything but. When has protectionism ever gotten us anywhere? It hasn't. They don't want equality, and all that is is hatred. Hard to stay optimistic when America has such a long way to go. 8y
See All 26 Comments
Laalaleighh Every. Single. Time. something like this happens I think "surely, surely they can't come up with an excuse for this one. This has to be the one we can all just unite against and say No. No no no this is wrong and it is not excusable". Tamir Rice I thought. Sandra Bland. John Crawford. Rekia Boyd. Philando Castille. And every. single. time. Every time humanity enrages and sickens and disappoints me all over again. 8y
Laalaleighh It's so sad that something that old is still so sickeningly relevant. 8y
BookishFeminist @Laalaleighh Right! You could literally just replace the name and print it the next time (God forbid there is a next time) this happens. I did a double take when reading this and was like wait, what year was this? Where was this? Yep, Seattle 1975. 8y
Laalaleighh For a long time (and I'm ashamed of this) I sat back silently and watched as people I knew made these excuses and took the wrong sides. Trayvon Martin I tried to speak up and was met by such a deluge of animosity that I kept my mouth shut for years. But something just snapped this past year. I'm so ashamed it took this long. I wish I had been less concerned with how people treated me and more concerned with sticking to my convictions sooner. 8y
Neverlistless Wow - thanks for sharing this. I can never remember the correct term, but this is further proof that when Americans see a black male, we have been conditioned to think "danger." And I continue to be amazed that there are people that deny that even THAT type of racism could be at work here and continue to deny that there is any racism at all in this country. 8y
Neverlistless Sorry to ramble 8y
Laura317 There is definitely racism in this country. Sadly, I don't think it will ever go away completely. 😔 It will take more than a hashtag to change some peoples' minds. I just don't know what, if anything, one can do to change a heart that is so determined to hate based on skin pigment. 8y
[DELETED] 1409720085 This is heartbreaking. 8y
BookishFeminist Where'd your comments go @Riveted_Reader_Melissa? 😳 8y
BookishFeminist @Laalaleighh I'm glad you're standing up now- it can be hard when you're surrounded by people that disagree with you on basic human rights. I've cut friends out of my life for their viewpoints on this & regularly take my jaded family members to task on it. (Thanksgivings are fun 🤓) It's hard but it's important, and my social life definitely doesn't matter more than other people's lives. I'll find new friends, thanks. 8y
BookishFeminist @Neverlistless It sadly is. I'm ashamed to admit that I harbored that reaction for years and still find that I have to challenge myself to push past it sometimes. It's hard to unlearn conditioning but it's necessary. People's lives are more important than our conditioned biases and fears. It's disheartening that people don't understand that unconscious racism exists. 😔 I sincerely don't understand how people say racism doesn't exist anymore. 8y
BookishFeminist @emilydecato It is. 😔 Very sobering to think about. 8y
BookishFeminist @Laura317 Sadly I think you're right because some people will always thrive off of pointing out people's differences rather than our incredible similarities. My only hope is that the number of the people who thrive off of that will greatly diminish as we have a stronger dialogue about this. 8y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa I was trying to redo part and repost with the correction, which of course moved that part to the end in order and quickly made a mess. I'll try re-writing it, but less confusing...Sorry for the confusion. 8y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @Laalaleighh Funny you should say that, because that's exactly what we all need to do. We all need to say simply that we do not agree when people speak that way and try to shut us down or drown us out...including the trolls. I grew up in a very white rural area, but I also grew up handicapped, so for me growing up I was very open to seeing inequalities from marriage inequality to racial discrimination and thinking, why should they be treated... 8y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa ..differently because of how they were born. It was a very young way of looking at it, but it worked for me to understand a lot of bigger issues at the time. I remember saying thinks about marriage equality when I was still in school and getting really funny looks, but times have changed...and as more people were open about their lives, more people came to understand and believe in equality more. I still have a friend that strongly believes... 8y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa ...that you shouldn't have to sell a wedding dress to a same sex couple if it isn't your religious belief, and I also have a gay friend from HS who recently posted an All Lives Matter meme, and I called him out on it too. (So apparently being in one discriminated class doesn't make everyone more open.). But after I commented on his post, his friends of color felt safe to comment on it too. My point is, long winded though it might be. Is those.. 8y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa ...of us that support more equality need to be more vocal. Because little by little, that vocal group becomes the majority and then things start to change. I think right now we have a silent majority, but unless we are vocal no one knows we are there. And the VERY vocal minority.... of haters and trollers think they are right and in the majority because so many of us are quiet. Sadly the squeaky wheel gets the grease, & only one side is loud. 8y
Laalaleighh @Riveted_Reader_Melissa @BookishFeminist y'all are right. I'd rather stick up for what I believe that make other people happy. The sheer amount of hate I've gotten from people I thought were my friends this year though? It makes me so sad. How could I have ever been friends with people so horrible? Or cared what they thought about me at all? And how do people become so hateful. It's just beyond me. Trolls and hateful peopleare winning the Internet 8y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @Laalaleighh They are. And I try to remind myself that the louder they get, is because they are getting defensive and feeling more cornered...so they are lashing out more. I have Unfriended some on Facebook, some that I kept I did move into acquaintances just because I didn't want or need to see their daily posts any more. But I have noticed more that if one person says, wait, I don't agree with that...it's more likely that others might chime 8y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa In too. Right now everyone's so afraid to speak up because of the amount of hate that gets heaped onto them. I was just reading about Jessica Valenti who just wrote a great sexism book, getting so much hate and threats she had to (at least temporarily) close her Twitter account. Which is just crazy and so sad. I think we all need to try and be out there and support each other when we say the positive things, because the trolls have no ... 8y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa ..problem piling on. I have found some that will never agree with me, but I know that I've disagreed have made a few others stop and thing twice.... If for no other reason than I think I'm the first real person they've met who said something to them. There's a lot of truth to peer pressure, it's time we made it work in our favor. 8y
moranadatter @Riveted_Reader_Melissa That's so true. Thanks! It's good to hear that one brave voice can encourage more. 8y
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BookishFeminist

? This was written in 1975. Let that sink in. This article easily could have been written today. 5 years ago. 10. 20. 30.

All this time has passed and our rhetoric hasn't even changed. That's sobering.

This is from the article "Causes and Circumstances" in this book. It discusses a black man who was pulled over in Seattle in 1975 and frisked under suspicion of committing robbery, then killed. ??

#BLM #BlackLivesMatter ✊?✊?

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BookishFeminist
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#CurrentlyReading | Enjoying this collection of journalism pieces from Calvin Trillin. In my opinion it's hard to get a sense for what the Civil Rights Movement was like from the sidelines, but it's fascinating to step into his shoes as Trillin discusses behind-the-scenes things he reported on as a journalist. Many of the stories have been "lost" to the more famous ones, and this an important yet sad & timely look at what it was truly like. ✊?✊?

Laura317 @BookishFeminist Anything in there about the Clinton Twelve? Those kids were so brave! We've come a long way, but there is still a loooong way to go. 8y
BookishFeminist @Laura317 Not yet but I'll keep you posted. I agree though- I've heard their story and such bravery. So much further to go. Many of these pieces easily could be written today. 8y
Laura317 @BookishFeminist We have a memorial out in front of my kids' school to them where it happened. Hard to believe. 😢 8y
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