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6 Reviews
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46 of 48 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A huge amount of information!,
This review is from: Memoir of a Race Traitor (Paperback)
This diary is fast moving and entertaining, yet it doesn't lose it's impact. Mab Segrest is an activist who has been working against the fascist right for many years. Her focus has been primarily on issues related to race, but she also touches on issues related to being a lesbian. Mab was raised in a family who actively worked to prevent the desegregation of schools, so her diary includes some interesting insights into what it's like to be actively working on political and social fronts that are opposite to those held by your immediate family. She also clearly and completely describes some heartbreaking work she did in the 80s - work that involved investigating the murders of several people, some of which were her friends and mentors. The events and the governmental abuses that led to these deaths are disturbing, yet described without a hint of sensationalism or propaganda - just honesty, and sorrow. The book ends with a 100 page history of the USA in in the past few decades, with an emphasis being placed on race relations and gay and lesbian issues. There's a lot of information in this little biography, and all of it's extremely well written. I highly recommend it.
13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Lively social justice history,
By
This review is from: Memoir of a Race Traitor (Paperback)
Growing up in the so-called 'post civil' rights era with intergrated schooling, myself and other 'white' liberals do not conciously realize what risks our own involvement with this social change entailed for all demographics.
Sure we muse about how we also would have participated in sit-ins...etc if we had been born generations earlier, but would we have actually followed through on those same pronouncements? Because her own family was involved in segregation activities, Segrest had an involuntary front-seat to the politics of hatred. This same enviroment unintentionally provided the reinforcement that the white Segrest needed to battle racism begining in the 1960's. Thus, unlike some people who would write this book today only to appear 'politically correct', Segrest has genuine empowerment intentions: She knows that although it is a part of her family's (and the community's past) racisim was not (and is not) right for anybody. It is also possible to love your own family while strongly opposing their politics---and judgements upon yourself. Segrest's innate ability to interconnect various social justice struggles with each other is another strength of this work. Racism, sexism, and homophobia are all different facets of the same bigotry. Preventing full community potential from being realized, all forms of discrimination must be abolished without exception. There is no such thing as 'acceptable' bigotry. Segrest can get too self-righteous at times for some readers(she is hardly the only person in the world who has worked against her own family's politics!), but this book stil expertly explores a VERY personal and political issue not fully addressed in our supposedly more enlightened times.
11 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
I Must Respond,
By A Customer
This review is from: Memoir of a Race Traitor (Paperback)
I write this review to praise Mab Segrest's brilliant, beautiful writing: stylistically lovely, deeply insightful, politically powerful. This book is a must read for anyone invested in US cultural politics from the perspective of a passionate activist and incredibly talented writer (and speaker -- I had the privilege of seeing Mab live and she's FABULOUS).
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Amazing,
This review is from: Memoir of a Race Traitor (Paperback)
One of the best political history books I've read. I couldn't put it down (this is, in part, because I'm from Robeson County and moved to Chapel Hill/Durham) Mab is an amazing writer who tries to be as descriptively accurate as possible, explains sides, and stiches things together as best as someone can stitch the parts of this story together. Awesome!
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent History and Herstory,
By Pauchi "Pauchi" (Huntsville, AL) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Memoir of a Race Traitor (Hardcover)
Dr. Segrest's commitment to fighting racial injustice is the compelling subject of Memoir of a Race Traitor. Her representation of the legacy of racism and the struggle for civil rights in America is as relevant in the Age of Obama as at any time during the past. Segrest's expert weaving of personal and social history is engaging, easy to follow, and often poetic, and her presentation of factual information is well researched and documented. The author's dedication to achieving justice and civil rights for all provides an inspirational model for white Americans seeking to understand why a more perfect union remains elusive and how we might move closer to it.
Part Two: "On Being White and Other Lies: A History of Racism in the United States" is especially valuable, if less purely enjoyable than Part One. In fact, this forty-six page section would serve well as a concise, readable supplement in our secondary and post-secondary history classes as it provides an honest, cogent overview of the history and impact of race in America. It would well replace the dishonest histories (recall Texas legislators excising the word slavery from high school textbooks in 2010) assigned many contemporary American youth. Let me add that I came across Segrest's book while (with great ambivalence) conducting internet research to satisfy my eighty-five-year-old mother's desire to learn more about her white 'family'. Like countless others of earlier generations, she was born of an illicit relationship between a white man and a black woman (my mixed-race grandmother) and raised on County Rd 30 in Shorter, Macon County, Alabama, half a mile from the Segrest homestead. Her father was the brother of Marvin Segrest, who killed Sammy Younge in Tuskegee, Alabama in 1966. While DNA could confirm this kinship, I am sufficiently convinced of it by empirical evidence, having met several Segrests who remain in Macon County, including my mother's look-alike half sister. One might imagine my surprise upon discovering Race Traitor, its content and purpose. Perhaps my subjective response to Dr. Segrest's life and work will serve to remind those who see America as two nations--one black and one white--that we are indeed one nation, connected by an unlikely and incredible history; by democratic ideals and Christian values; and more often than we know, by genetics. Would that we all had Mab Segrest's brave heart, that we all could be so honest and so determined to perfect this American world.
8 of 112 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Disgusting and contemptible,
By David Goldberg (New York) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Memoir of a Race Traitor (Paperback)
This book showcases the filthy ravings of a truly degenerate "human being." Read it for insight into the mind of a truly depraved individual.
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Memoir of a Race Traitor by Mab Segrest (Hardcover - July 1, 1999)
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