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About the Author

Includes the names: lindavillarosa, Linda Villarosa

Works by Linda Villarosa

Associated Works

The 1619 Project: A New Origin Story (2021) — Contributor — 2,373 copies, 36 reviews
The Letter Q: Queer Writers' Notes to their Younger Selves (2012) — Contributor — 297 copies, 5 reviews
Afrekete: An Anthology of Black Lesbian Writing (1995) — Contributor — 153 copies, 1 review
The 1619 Project {The New York Times Magazine, August 18, 2019} (2019) — Contributor — 137 copies, 5 reviews
The Best American Science and Nature Writing 2019 (2020) — Contributor — 128 copies
OutWrite: The Speeches That Shaped LGBTQ Literary Culture (2022) — Contributor — 32 copies
Go Girl! The Black Woman's Book of Travel and Adventure (1997) — Contributor — 26 copies

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Common Knowledge

Gender
female

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Reviews

3 reviews
Well-researched, first person, and passionate account of the matrix we cant see that belittles, discounts, and disregards people of color. The root of the inequitable outcomes is not race, it is most assuredly racism. Each one of us can remember a stunning blow to our ego, a loss of credibility, being emotionally body-checked by a bully or otherwise dominant authority figure. It is disheartening and utterly tragic that a whole class of people experience this every day in every setting where show more they are entitled to seek relief and advocacy. And for this, we will all fail. We leave too much on the table. Among those we’ve disenfranchised as a matter of business or birthright is certainly one (or two or three or more) who could save us all. This white-ish sense of entitlement is the means by which we have hoisted our whole civilization by its own petard. And it need not be so.

Great book. Beyond Tuskegee there was sterilization. In recent history. There is death resulting from doctors misdiagnoses, withholding equal care with no grasp of the social causes of health outcomes. There is indifference to the weight of social stressors on mental health. There is willful acceptance of unfairness not just to people of color but much or most of rural America. When these two groups unite around common values, of which there are many, there would be true equity.
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This book dived deep into medical racism and the terrible ways that through history and to the current day, Black people are treated much different to white people. Some of the topics that Linda discusses were shocking to me, and while I knew that medical racism exists, hearing the statistics and real stories really brought it to light.

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Statistics

Works
7
Also by
8
Members
361
Popularity
#66,479
Rating
½ 4.3
Reviews
3
ISBNs
20

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