Welcome to Edmonds Community College

Diversity at Edmonds Community College

DIVERSITY RESOURCES

Edmonds CC Library Anti-Racism Collection


As recipients of the 2006-07 Echelbarger-Sherman Award, we were given two unique opportunities.  First, we were able to consider our internal working collaborations as others may view them from outside our department and ponder the reasons for our successes.  Second, we have the enviable responsibility of using the departmental stipends provided through the award in a way that will benefit the college and reflect our perspectives in a meaningful way.  Because we believe that our own diverse characteristics, both individually and collectively, serve to inform and enrich the work of these monies to create an “anti-racism” library collection.  We are doing this because the three of us believe the diversity work in which the college is engaged is, perhaps, its most important undertaking.

 

As guidelines for the purchase of materials for this collection, we have adopted the Anti-Racism Principles for Effective Organizing and Transformation developed by the People’s Institute for Survival and Beyond.  Our vision is to provide a variety of resources, both print and electronic, so all students, employees and community members can engage in the important work of diversity.  We hope this initiative will help to support the Undoing Racism training on our campus as well as the work of the Diversity Council, the Teaching and Learning Diversity Committee, the Diversity Studies Department, the Equity & Diversity Center, ODET, the Arts, Culture and Civic Engagement Initiative and all the other initiatives and efforts related to creating an awareness of and developing methods to combat personal, cultural and institutional racism at the college and beyond.

Dale Burke, Johnetta Moore and Monica Tobin

_____________________________________

 “The trouble around difference is really about privilege and power – the existence of privilege and the lopsided distribution of power that keeps it going.  The trouble is rooted in a legacy that we all inherited, and WHILE WE’RE HERE IT BELONGS TO US.  It isn’t our fault.  It wasn’t caused by something we did or didn’t do.  But now that it’s ours, it’s up to us to decide how we’re going to deal with it before we collectively pass it along to the generations that will follow ours.”

Johnson, Allan G. Privilege, Power, and Difference. 2006

 

“Many people of color understand the power differential inherent in the three manifestations of racism: personal, cultural and institutional.  They view racism not as an individual issue but as a systemic problem.  However, many people still characterize racism as a virulent form of individual prejudice…They are unschooled in the systemic ways that racism has been institutionalized and are oblivious to the reality of privilege given automatically and invisibly to white people very single day.”

Ayvazian, Andrea and Beverly Tatum, “Can We talk?” Sorjourners  1996


 

Anti-Racism Materials

24 Reasons Why African Americans Suffer
Jimmy Dumas. Call Number: E185.86.A15 1999

Achieving Faculty Diversity: Debunking the Myths
Daryl G. Smith with Lisa E. Wolf and Bonnie E. Busenberg.  Call Number: LB2332.72.S65 1996

Bad blood: The Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment
James H. Jones.  Call Number: R853.H8J66 1993

Banished
California Newsreel presents a film by Marco Williams; written by Marco Williams and Maia Harris Call Number: E185.86.B2638 2007

Black Demons: Media's Depiction of the African American Male Criminal Stereotype
Dennis Rome.  Call Number: P94.5.A37R66 2004

Buried in the bitter waters: The Hidden History of Racial Cleansing in America
Elliot Jaspin.  Call Number: E185.61.J37 2007

Can We Talk About Race?: And Other Conversations in an Era of School Resegregation
Beverly Daniel Tatum.  Call Number: LC212.42.T37 2007

The Color of Wealth : The Story Behind the U.S. Racial Wealth Divide
Meizhu Lui ... [et al.] Call Number: HC110.W4C654 2006

Destruction of Black civilization: Great Iissues of a Race from 4500 B.C. to 2000 A.D.
Chancellor Williams; illustrated by Murry N. DePillars.  Call Number: DT14.W53 1987

Diversifying the Faculty: a Guidebook for Search Committees
Caroline Sotello Viernes Turner.  Call Number: LB2332.72.T87 2002

Diversifying the Faculty: A Guidebook for Search Committees
Office of Human Relations Programs in collaboration with associates at the University of Maryland, College Park and the Association of American Colleges and Universities   
Call Number: LC213.3.U5D58 1998

Diversity Blueprint: A Planning Manual for Colleges and Universities
Created by the Office of Human Relations Programs in Collaboration with Associates at the University of Maryland, College Park and the Association of American Colleges and Universities
Call Number:  LC213.3.U5D58 1998 

Diversity Mosaic Participant Workbook: Developing Cultural Competence
Tina Rasmussen.  Call Number: HF5549.5.M5R373 2007

Every night & Every Morn: Portraits of Asian, Hispanic, Jewish, African-American, and Native-American recipients of the Congressional Medal of Honor
John L. Johnson.  Call Number: UB433.J63 2007

Ex Mex: from Migrants to Immigrants
Jorge G. Castañeda.  Call Number: E184.M5C368 2007

Heart of Whiteness: Confronting Race, Racism, and White Privilege
Robert Jensen.  Call Number: E184.A1J425 2005

His Panic: Why Americans Fear Hispanics in the U.S.
Geraldo Rivera.  Call Number: JV6475.R58 2008

Immigration Solution: A Better Plan than Today's
Heather Mac Donald, Victor Davis Hanson, Steven Malanga.  Call Number: JV6483.M25 2007

In Search of the Promised Land: A Black Family and the Old South
John Hope Franklin, Loren Schweninger.  Call Number: E444.F825 2006

Life in Prison
Stanley "Tookie" Williams with Barbara Cottman Becnel; photographs by D Stevens and others. 
Call Number: HV9471.W544 2001

Making a Real Difference with Diversity: A Guide to Institutional Change
Alma R. Clayton-Pedersen ... [et al.]; Nancy O'Neill, contributing editor.   
Call Number: LC1099.4.C2M35 2007

Minorities in Higher Education: Twenty-Second Annual Status Report
Bryan J. Cook, Diana I. Cordova. Call Number: LC3727.H37 2006

Mongrels, Bastards, Orphans, and Vagabonds: Mexican Immigration and the Future of Race in America
Gregory Rodriguez.  Call Number: E184.M5R587 2007

Poetics of Anti-Racism
Edited by Nuzhat Amin and George J. Sefa Dei; with special assistance by Meredith Lordan.    Call Number: HT1523.P64 2006

Post Traumatic Slave Syndrome: America's Legacy of Enduring Injury and Healing
Joy DeGruy Leary.  Call Number: RC451.5.N4L43 2005

Privilege, Power, and Difference
Allan G. Johnson.  Call Number: HN90.E4J64 2006

Racial and Ethnic Relations
Joe R. Feagin, Clairece Booher Feagin.  Call Number: E184.A1F38 2008

Rethinking the Color Line: Readings in Race and Ethnicity
[edited by] Charles A. Gallagher.  Call Number: E184.A1R4485 2007

Seize the Time: The Story of the Black Panther Party and Huey P. Newton
Bobby Seale.  Call Number: E185.615.S37 1991

Sundown Towns: A Hidden Dimension of American Racism
James W. Loewen.  Call Number: E185.615.L577 2006

Talking Race in the Classroom
Jane Bolgatz.  Call Number: LC1099.3.B65 2005

Teaching to Transgress: Education as the Practice of Freedom
Bell Hooks.  Call Number: LC196.H66 1994

To be a slave
Julius Lester; illustrated by Tom Feelings. Call Number: E444.L47 1968 

Unchained Memories: Readings from the Slave Narratives
Foreword by Henry Louis Gates, Jr. ; introduction by Spencer Crew and Cynthia Goodman. Call Number:  E444.U53 2002 

Violence of Hate: Confronting Racism, Anti-Semitism, and Other Forms of Bigotry
Jack Levin. Call Number: HV6773.5.L48 2007

Where We Stand: Class Matters
Bell Hooks.  Call Number: HN90.S6H66 2000

"Why are all the Black Kids Sitting Together in the Cafeteria?": And Other Conversations About Race
Beverly Daniel Tatum.  Call Number: E185.625.T38 2003


 

 

Edmonds Community College | 20000 68th Ave W | Lynnwood, WA 98036
YouTube Ning Twitter Facebook


Last updated: 08/11/12