by Mufson, Michael | Feb 11, 2021 | It's Monumental Resources, Podcast Episodes
Black Lives Matter was just nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize—so this week, host Brittany Packnett Cunningham sits down with co-founder of the Black Lives Matter organization Opal Tometi. How did the movement go from being seen as radical to more widely accepted? And...
by Mufson, Michael | Feb 8, 2021 | It's Monumental Resources, Literature & Poetry, Podcast Episodes
Throughout April, we’ve been telling stories that coincide with the census — the one time every decade everyone in the U.S. is asked to think about their racial identity—whether they like it or not. And in each of our episodes, we’ve led with a question:...
by Mufson, Michael | Feb 8, 2021 | It's Monumental Resources, Podcast Episodes
One of the country’s greatest writers has a new book out, and it took almost a century to get published. Zora Neale Hurston’s “Barracoon” is based on her conversations with Oluale Kossola, the man believed to be one of the last people stolen,...
by Mufson, Michael | Feb 8, 2021 | It's Monumental Resources, Podcast Episodes
In 1933, faced with a housing shortage, the federal government began a program explicitly designed to increase — and segregate — America’s housing stock. Author Richard Rothstein says the housing programs begun under the New Deal were tantamount to a...
by Mufson, Michael | Feb 8, 2021 | It's Monumental Resources, Podcast Limited Series
A podcast that takes a look back in history at a time of great promise and great disappointment for Black Americans who dreamed of and struggled for the promise of community and full citizenship. Listen on the Website
by Mufson, Michael | Feb 8, 2021 | It's Monumental Resources, Podcast Episodes
For the past year, Lois Beckett [@loisbeckett], senior reporter at The Guardian US, has been showing up at white nationalist rallies, taking their pictures, writing down what they say. And she finds herself thinking: How did we get here? How did her beat as a...