A manifesto from one of America’s most influential activists which disrupts political, economic, and social norms by reimagining the Black Radical Tradition.
Drawing on Black intellectual and grassroots organizing traditions, including the Haitian Revolution, the US civil rights movement, and LGBTQ rights and feminist movements, Unapologetic challenges all of us engaged in the social justice struggle to make the movement for Black liberation more radical, more queer, and more feminist. This book provides a vision for how social justice movements can become sharper and more effective through principled struggle, healing justice, and leadership development. It also offers a flexible model of what deeply effective organizing can be, anchored in the Chicago model of activism, which features long-term commitment, cultural sensitivity, creative strategizing, and multiple cross-group alliances. And Unapologetic provides a clear framework for activists committed to building transformative power, encouraging young people to see themselves as visionaries and leaders.
“This handbook for the revolution is a rousing call for collective liberation.”
—Publishers Weekly, Starred Review
“Timely and important, Carruthers’ book is a strong testament to the resilience of the radical black liberation movement as well as an impassioned appeal to continue the fight for social justice in a political environment characterized by increasing hostility to equality and difference. Powerful, potent reading.”
—Kirkus Reviews
“A powerful handbook to the contemporary black liberation movement . . . A bracing and provocative report from the front line.”
—Booklist
“The slim, passionate volume chronicles Carruthers’ political evolution and features important lessons learned through an education in Saul Alinsky-informed community organizing, providing concrete tools for a new generation.”
—In These Times
“[Unapologetic] does not waver in its commitment to telling hard truths or demanding justice.”
—Women’s Review of Books
“Charlene Carruthers carries the burden, the beauty, the wisdom of four hundred years of Black struggle. But she also brings a critical perspective and a creative vision, rooted in her extensive experience as an organizer and organic intellectual and in her fierce and fearless commitment to truth. This is an inspiring, powerful, but difficult book, because she confronts our movements, our people, our closeted silences, toxic masculinity, patriarchal violence, romantic and selective historical memory, and our future head-on, through a radical Black queer feminist lens. Welcome to the Black radical tradition.”
—Robin D. G. Kelley, author of Freedom Dreams: The Black Radical Imagination
“This brilliant and powerful book is a clarion call to keep alive the Black radical tradition in these reactionary times. Charlene A. Carruthers is an exemplary organic intellectual rooted in the struggles of black poor and working people, especially LGBTQ youth, with a subtle analysis and an international vision for freedom. She stands in the great lineage of Harriet Tubman, Ida B. Wells-Barnett, and Marsha P. Johnson—grand fighters and great lovers of everyday black people and oppressed folk everywhere!”
—Dr. Cornel West
“Charlene Carruthers is a powerful organizer, radical thinker, paradigm-shifter, and one of the most influential political voices of her generation. Anyone seriously interested in the struggle for Black liberation in this country needs to listen carefully to what she has to say.”
—Barbara Ransby, author of Ella Baker and the Black Freedom Movement and Making All Black Lives Matter
“Leadership is the ability to not only make your own way but to return to give others a roadmap that they, too, can follow. This is what Charlene Carruthers does with Unapologetic. She offers us a guide to getting free with incisive prose, years of grassroots organizing experience, and a deeply intersectional lens. She doesn’t forget any of us, and reminds us that bringing all of ourselves and our people with us is the only way any of us will get free.”
—Janet Mock, author of Redefining Realness and Surpassing Certainty
“Unapologetic serves as our marching orders. Charlene gives us not just a manual but a prayer, an intention, a critical path forward, and a deep analysis on where we’ve been. She educates us about community violence and state violence, and provides the clarity to show why Black liberation is crucial for us all.”
—Patrisse Khan Cullors, coauthor of When They Call You a Terrorist: A Black Lives Matter Memoir
“Unapologetic is a beautiful, insightful, and powerful analysis of this moment, Black movements, and Black radical futures. Both Charlene Carruthers’s work as an organizer and organic intellectual and her writing in Unapologetic embody the Black radical tradition and the best of Black feminism today. Carruthers confronts the difficulties of organizing in this era, while also detailing the possibilities of collective struggle. She helps us understand the contours of a Black queer feminist future and what we all must do to get there. This is a must-read for anyone committed to freedom and liberation.”
—Cathy J. Cohen, Democracy Remixed: Black Youth and the Future of American Politics
“With this clear call to action, Charlene Carruthers’s Unapologetic is a desperately needed analysis of the past, the present, and where we must head into the future. It’s a must-read for everyone who wants deeper, honest insight into the struggles happening in our country right now, clarifying why stopping anti-Black racism, homophobia, and sexism and building transformative power intersectionally are urgent necessities for our families, communities, and the nation.”
—Kristin Rowe-Finkbeiner, author, executive director and cofounder of MomsRising.org
“Unapologetic is as much a narrative about collective youth-driven organizing by those affiliated with the current Movement for Black Lives as it is a story about how one young Black woman from the South Side of Chicago found herself leading one of the most consequential formations of the past decade. The book offers practical tips for organizers along with a critical analysis of the promise and pitfalls of this current iteration of the Black radical tradition. As an organizer, I found myself nodding along as I read this terrific book while taking notes to improve my own practice.”
—Mariame Kaba, founder of Project NIA and cofounder of Survived & Punished
“Charlene Carruthers speaks with the authenticity and authority of an organizer from the front lines of struggle. Cut from the cloth of the South Side of Chicago, Carruthers offers a critical perspective into the experience of organizing and building a movement from the inside. As an organizer, Charlene provides rare insight into the strategies, tactics, and raging debates that animate the phenomenon of Black Lives Matter. If you want to understand this movement and the people whose hands are dirty from working with the grassroots, then you need this book.”
—Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor, author of From #BlackLivesMatter to Black Liberation
Author’s Note
Preface
CHAPTER 1
All of Us or None of Us
CHAPTER 2
Reviving the Black Radical Imagination
CHAPTER 3
The Case for Reimagining the Black Radical Tradition
CHAPTER 4
Three Commitments
CHAPTER 5
Five Questions
CHAPTER 6
The Chicago Model
CONCLUSION
The Mandate
Acknowledgments
Notes
Index
- “Women’s Liberation! Feminist Writings That Inspired a Revolution and Still Can,” Library of America, book received shout out during live program (43-min mark)
- “Columnist E.J. Dionne On How To Unite The Democratic Party,” On Point/NPR, interview
- “Our March Cover Stars: The Mothers and Daughters of the Movement,” Out Magazine, feature
- “Charlene Carruthers Is the Queer Black Feminist Leading the Movement,” Out Magazine, feature
- “Reclaiming Martin Luther King’s Radical Legacy,” KPFA/Upfront, pre-taped radio interview
- “12 Days of Gifting, Day 11: For the Bibliophiles,” The Root, listed in gift-giving roundup
- “‘Misogynoir’ Coiner Moya Bailey Is Eating Pasta and Channeling Her Inner Black Auntie,” Bon Appetit, book mentioned in Q&A with Moya Bailey
- “Unapologetic,” WERA/Enlighten Me (DC), radio interview
- “Before the Midterms, Five Questions for the Political Left,” Truthout, op-ed
- “Charlene Carruthers Tackles Intersectionality, Social Justice Movements In New Book,” WBEZ/Morning Shift, radio interview
- “9 Books To Get You Psyched—And Prepared—For The Pink Wave,” The Daily Beast, included in reading roundup
- “10 New Political Books To Read Before The 2018 Midterm Elections,” Bustle, included in reading roundup
- “Chicago Claps Back,” Intercepted, podcast interview
- “Angela Davis and Charlene Carruthers Visit Campus for Intergenerational Dialogue,” The Index (Kalamazoo College), write-up on Angela Davis event
- “Protest Is the Work of Hope,” The Progressive, included in 3-book roundup
- “WSW: Training Up Our Next Civil Rights Leaders,” WestSouthwest/WMUK, interview
- “Charlene Carruthers pens ‘Unapologetic’ book,” WJLA-ABC/Good Morning Washington (DC), interview
- “Unapologetic,” C-SPAN Book TV, filmed Housing Works event on August 29, 2018
- “The Race-Focused Books We're Reading This Fall,” Colorlines, listed in reading roundup
- “Talking with Charlene Carruthers, author of Unapologetic: A Black, Queer, and Feminist Mandate for Radical Movements,” KBOO, interview
- “In ‘Unapologetic,’ Charlene Carruthers Offers Young Black Organizers Inspiration, Purpose, and Strength,” Rewire News, write-up
- “BYP100’s Charlene Carruthers on being Black, feminist and queer,” Windy City Times, Q&A
- “BYP100’s Charlene Carruthers gets ‘Unapologetic,’” Windy City Times, write-up
- “‘Unapologetic’: Charlene Carruthers on Her Black, Queer and Feminist Mandate for Radical Movements,” Democracy Now!, interview
- “Using Radical Activism To Reform,” KCUR/Up to Date, interview
- “The Case For More Radical Movements,” KERA/THINK, interview
- “Unapologetic: Activist and Author Charlene Carruthers Says Radical Movements Require Radical Honesty,” The Root, excerpt
- “Unapologetically Free: Charlene Carruthers Gives Us a Black, Queer, and Feminist Mandate for Radical Movements,” Bitch Media, Q&A
- “Five Years In, Hearing the Voices of Black Lives Matter,” The Village Voice, book included in piece on Black Lives Matter
- “Instagram post,” Well-Read Black Girl, included in Fall reading list on Instagram