Assata Taught Me, Donna Murch
Assata Taught Me, Donna Murch
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Assata Taught Me
State Violence, Racial Capitalism, and the Movement for Black Lives

Author: Donna Murch

Narrator: Patryce Williams

Unabridged: 6 hr 29 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 05/03/2022


Synopsis

Black Panther and Cuban exile, Assata Shakur, has inspired multiple generations of radical protest, including our contemporary Black Lives Matter movement. Drawing its title from one of America’s foremost revolutionaries, this collection of thought-provoking essays by award-winning Panther scholar Donna Murch explores how social protest is challenging our current system of state violence and mass incarceration.Murch exposes the devastating consequences of overlapping punishment campaigns against gangs, drugs, and crime on poor and working-class populations of color. Through largely hidden channels, it is these punishment campaigns, Murch says, that generate enormous revenues for the state. Under such difficult conditions, organized resistance to the advancing tide of state violence and incarceration has proved difficult.This timely and urgent book shows how a youth-led political movement has emerged since the killing of Trayvon Martin that challenges the bipartisan consensus on punishment and looks to the future through a redistributive, queer, and feminist lens. Murch frames the contemporary Black Lives Matter movement in relation to earlier struggles for Black Liberation, while excavating the origins of mass incarceration and the political economy that drives it.Assata Taught Me offers a fresh and much-needed historical perspective on the fifty years since the founding of the Black Panther Party, in which the world’s largest police state has emerged.

About Donna Murch

Donna Murch is an Associate Professor of History at Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, and sits on the Executive Council of the Rutgers AAUP-AFT. She is the author of Living for the City: Migration, Education, and the Rise of the Black Panther Party in Oakland, California (University of North Carolina Press).

About Patryce Williams

Patryce Williams is a multidisciplinary artist based in New York City and is a member of the Actors' Equity Association. She is the lead vocalist and executive producer for the band The Quiet Stars, formally known as SUM. Earning a BFA in theater at Central Connecticut State University, Patryce has lent her talents touring regional theater and singing on world-renowned stages such as the Kennedy Center Millennium Stage. With a passion for reading since she first discovered novels via The Baby-Sitters Club, Patryce has since grown to love books of all kinds, including modern literature, rom com, and self-development. Her favorite job to date is serving as her son Jackson's exclusive narrator.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Xavier

A coherent collection of essays that disappointingly offers little engagement with the actual legacy of Assata Shakur. To be sure, Murch offers an accessible collection of articles that may very well serve as an entry point for understanding the history of the Panthers, the development of the carcera......more

Goodreads review by Sarah

I bought this since the library didn't have it. The last few essays/chapters are everything the title promises. The first half I remember as being a bit repetitive. Consecutive chapters covered much of the same ground, probably because they were essays written separately for other publications, and......more

Goodreads review by Nadav

This book includes several insightful and accessible essays on state violence especially in the realm of the Prison Industrial Complex, and delves into lineages of Black-led movements up to today. It provides important historical context for the last decade of US-based organizing and uprisings, larg......more


Quotes

“From the extractive structures of the world’s largest police state to the revolutionary resistance, Donna Murch meticulously traces the history and contours of the current Movement for Black Lives. This book is seminal like its namesake, Assata Shakur.” Ibram X. Kendi, author of How to Be an Antiracist