anti-black racism
Photo by Arindam Shivaani/NurPhoto via Getty Images

Black Lives Matter: 72 Racism Awareness Books, Movies, Resources and More

If you're a non-Black person who has never fully engaged with the reality of systemic racism due to your own privilege, it's on you to educate yourself.

The past week has been a heavy one. The reality of anti-Black racism in the US, Canada and around the world is no secret. But over the last several days, the outrage over repeated and systemic violence against Black people reached a boiling point, fuelled by a recent spate of police brutality. In response, white people and other non-Black folk around the world are taking it upon themselves—finally—to educate themselves to be better allies, to unlearn generations of internalized racism, and to attempt to become the anti-racist citizens the world needs in order to have a chance at lasting change.

The past week may have been a wake-up call for some but the truth is, nothing about this is new. This is what Black communities have been living with for centuries. As Roxane Gay writes in a recent op-ed for the New York Times, about the post-pandemic status quo people are hoping to return to: “The rest of the world yearns to get back to normal. For Black people, normal is the very thing from which we yearn to be free.”

If you’re a non-Black person who has never fully engaged with the reality of systemic racism due to your own privilege, it’s on you to educate yourself. Read on for a list of films, television shows, books, social media accounts and other resources to turn to in the coming weeks, months and years to understand better the history of anti-Black racism.

FILMS & TV SHOWS
13th, Ava DuVernay (Netflix)
Fruitvale Station, Ryan Coogler (on demand)
The Hate U Give, George Tillman Jr. (Crave)
Ninth Floor, Mina Shum (National Film Board of Canada)
Selma, Ava DuVernay (on demand)
I Am Not Your Negro, Raoul Peck (Amazon Prime Video)
If Beale Street Could Talk, Barry Jenkins (Amazon Prime Video)
Do The Right Thing, Spike Lee (on demand)
Just Mercy, Destin Daniel Cretton (on demand)
Clemency, Chinonye Chukwu (on demand)
Watchmen, Damon Lindelof (Crave)
Journey to Justice, Roger McTair (National Film Board of Canada)
Les Misérables, Ladj Ly (on demand)
When They See Us, Ava DuVernay (Netflix)
BlackKklansman, Spike Lee (Crave)
The Good Fight, Robert King, Michelle King and Phil Alden Robinson (on demand)
Beyond Moving, Vikram Dasgupta (Hot Docs Canada)
The Colour of Beauty, Elizabeth St. Philip (National Film Board of Canada)
Atlanta, Donald Glover (on demand)
Coded Bias, Shalini Kantayya (Hot Docs Canada)
Whose Streets?, Sabaah Folayan and Damon Davis (Paradise Theatre, Canada)

BOOKS
White Fragility, Robin DiAngelo
Between the World and Me, Ta-Nehisi Coates
Me and White Supremacy, Layla F Saad
Born a Crime, Trevor Noah
Becoming, Michelle Obama
The Color Purple, Alice Walker
Beastgirl and Other Origin Myths, Elizabeth Acevedo (children’s book)
I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, Maya Angelou
Girl, Woman, Other, Bernardine Evaristo
Dreams From My Father, Barack Obama
Homegoing, Yaa Gyasi
How to Be an Antiracist by Ibram X Kendi
Sulwe, Lupita Nyong’o (children’s book)
Beloved, Toni Morrison
Counting Descent, Clint Smith III
Stamped, Ibram X Kendi and Jason Reynolds (YA book)
They Said This Would Be Fun, Eternity Martis
The Skin We’re In, Desmond Cole

SOCIAL MEDIA ACCOUNTS
Rachel Elizabeth Cargle, writer and activist (Instagram)
Deray Mckesson, activist (Twitter)
Brittany Packnett, activist (Twitter)
Tyrone Rex Edwards, reporter (Instagram)
Tracy Peart, makeup artist (Instagram)
Nikki Ogunnaike, Deputy Fashion Director, GQ (Instagram)
Nikole Hannah Jones, journalist (Twitter)
Donte Colley, influencer (Instagram)
Mustafa the Poet, poet and songwriter (Instagram)
Danielle Prescod, Style Director, BET (Instagram)
Kathleen Newman-Bremang, writer (Twitter)
Roxane Gay, writer (Twitter)
Shannae Ingleton Smith, entrepreneur (Instagram)
Sasha Exeter, influencer (Instagram)
Clint Smith III, writer, poet and scholar (Twitter)

View this post on Instagram

Swipe for resources. • Racial justice is a feminist issue and the deep disparity in how white women showed up for “all women” at the women’s march but haven’t showed up in the millions for the current uprising speaks to the @harpersbazaarus article I wrote back in 2018 titled “When Feminism Is White Supremacy In Heels” • My work has always been done through the intersected lens of race and womanhood. You can find more resources from me on this topic in my bio including the link to my article and the link to my recorded lecture Unpacking White Feminism. • White women I am demanding you tap into the radical empathy I mentioned in my public address yesterday. Move past “I’m so sorry this is happening to you” and ask yourself “how do I play into the pain the black community is doing and how do I hold myself and my community accountable for enacting justice?” Ask yourself what moved you to show up on the streets in 2017 but isn’t lighting a fire in you in this very moment. • Do you hear me? Drop a comment/emoji and tag who needs to hear this • #revolutionnow #manifest #racism #blm #soul #spirit #yoga #crystals #essentialoils #goodvibes #goddess #yoga #retreat #yogaretreat #seattle #nyc #la #marieforleo #gabriellebernstein #spiritual #success #lifecoach #bookclub #nyc #lululemon #doterra #wanderlust #teachersofinstagram #dogsofinstagram #catsofinstagram

A post shared by Rachel Elizabeth Cargle (@rachel.cargle) on

PODCASTS
Still Processing, hosted by Jenna Wortham and Wesley Morris (The New York Times)
Pod Save the People, hosted by Deray Mckesson (Crooked Media)
1619, hosted by Nikole Hannah Jones (The New York Times)
Code Switch, hosted by Shereen Marisol Meraji and Gene Demby (NPR)
Code Black, co-founded by Renee Duncan, Bunmi Adeoye and Maxine McDonald (Code Black Communicator Network)
Seeing White, hosted by John Biewen (Scene on Radio)
The Diversity Gap Podcast, hosted by Bethaney Wilkinson (The Diversity Gap)

RESOURCES
By Blacks (Instagram)
Black Art 365 (Instagram)
The Conscious Kid (Instagram)
Black Artist Space (Instagram)
Black Lives Matter (Instagram)
Black Lives Matter Toronto (Twitter)
Gal-Dem Zine (Instagram)
Black Legal Action Centre (website)
NIA Centre for the Arts (website)
Federation of Black Canadians (website)
Womanly Mag (Instagram)

View this post on Instagram

May 28, 2020 STATEMENT ON THE DEATH OF REGIS FROM THE KORCHINSKI-PAQUET FAMILY On Wednesday May 27, 2020 at approximately 5pm a 911 call was made by a concerned mother Claudette Beals-Clayton, for the safety and well-being of her child Regis Korchinski-Paquet. Regis was in distress over a family conflict and her mother sought police assistance to bring calm to the situation. Once police arrived at the residence they met Claudette her mother, Regis and Reece Korchinski-Beals, her brother in the hallway of 100 High Park in Toronto. Claudette pleaded with police to provide assistance to her daughter and take her to CAMH to provide mental health support, as Claudette did not want the problem to escalate where it became unsafe. Words were exchanged between Regis and the police officers, and Regis stated she had to use the bathroom and went into her apartment. Her brother who was present, witnessed multiple police officers enter the unit after Regis went in. When her brother attempted to go in after his sister he was stopped by police from entering the unit. After approximately 1-2 minutes the Mother and the brother heard commotion in the apartment and then heard Regis cry out “Mom help, Mom help, Mom help”. After that Mother and Brother heard silence. Eventually an officer came out of the unit, knocked on the neighbour’s door, and stated to the family that she is over at the neighbour’s house or in the unit below. After a few moments the mother then asked the officers if she is on the ground. An officer went into the unit, then came back out and told her mother yes she is on the ground. The family is distraught over the senseless loss of life and wants Justice for Regis. The family wants answers to what happened. How can a call for assistance turn into a loss of life. The family wants to ensure camera footage from hallway is secured by the SIU. The family is extremely concerned that in recent times people with mental health issues across North America are ending up dead after interactions with the police.

A post shared by ByBlacks (@byblacks) on