Thandisizwe Chimurenga
A society born of white supremacy and patriarchy must, by definition, ignore the voices of Black women. We know that, unfortunately, such an attitude will also naturally seep into every stratum of that societyPart of the contribution to correct that was the centering and airing of Black women’s voices through Some of Us Are Brave: A Black Women’s Radio Program that aired on Pacifica’s Los Angeles radio station (KPFK) from 2003 until 2011.The program covered a myriad of issues by amplifying the voices of a broad cross-section of Black women. Some of those voices have been preserved here in this volume. In addition to capturing various moments in time with a variety of women, this is also a means of taking the intellectual production of and about Black women out of the hands of institutions that are both fundamentally anti-Black and anti-woman. Volume 1 contains interviews under the headings The Shoulders on Which We Stand and Art for Our Sake.Volume 2 covers Black Lives Have Always Mattered, Black Women’s Health, Bruthas on Sistas, and Sistas in Struggle.In a media landscape that often falls short when it comes to representing the voices of Black feminists, this series is a breath of fresh air. - Piper Carter, Detroit-based Arts & Culture Organizer,Host of 'Beyond Breaking Barriers' podcast on Black Power MediaIt is a triumph of a book and I feel I am a better man for having read it.- Jon Jeter, authorFlat Broke in the Free Market: How Globalization Fleeced Working People, former Washington Post foreign correspondent,former producer for This American Life