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Monday, December 21, 2020

John Thompson on Ta-Nehisi Coates and Bruce Springsteen | Diane Ravitch's blog

John Thompson on Ta-Nehisi Coates and Bruce Springsteen | Diane Ravitch's blog
John Thompson on Ta-Nehisi Coates and Bruce Springsteen




John Thompson, historian and retired teacher in Oklahoma, shares ideas about teaching in difficult times.

My high school and GED students always loved wrestling with the ideas presented by Ta-Nehisi Coates and Bruce Springsteen. I’m sure they would now agree that America needs both – Coates’ Between the World and Me, centered around Coates’ letter to 15-year-old son, and the 71-year-old Springsteen’s Letter to You. Actually we need both masterpieces and Kamilah Forbes’ HBO adaptation of Coates’ advice on how to “become conscious citizens of this beautiful and terrible world.”

Coates’ Between the World and Me tackles “the question of my life,” which is “how one should live within a black body, within a country lost in the Dream.” It focuses on the fatal police shooting of his fellow Howard University student, Prince Jones. It illustrates how “the plunder of black life was drilled into this country in its infancy and reinforced across its history, so that plunder has become an heirloom, an intelligence, a sentience, a default setting to which, likely to the end of our days, we must invariably return.”

But as Michiko Kakutani observed in his New York Times CONTINUE READING: John Thompson on Ta-Nehisi Coates and Bruce Springsteen | Diane Ravitch's blog