Literary Fiction by People of Color discussion
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Buddy Read: Assata
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Beverly
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Jan 11, 2018 09:22AM

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I remember when reading the book that the description of police brutality was true - they were just vicious in eradicating anything they deemed to be Black radicals.
And it was all proudly reported in the newspapers in a very biased way.

I'm a late 70s baby, so this was just a hair before my time, but many of the same issues that are covered in this book are present now :/ I'm sure it was "worse" back then, butttt (cutting this off before it drifts into political territory ha)

The book starts out quite disorienting. Smack dab in the middle of police misconduct and abuse. It is hard to understand the incarceration and the attitudes of the prison guards and the powers that be in context. We know she has been accused of killing a cop, but how society has arrived at this conclusion at the moment is unclear. I know Assata Shakur is the most wanted woman in America and that her alleged crimes have to do with her participation in Black Liberation Army which has likely been demonized by the media and the establishment government, but so far I don't have context. In the writing of this, Shakur assumes baseline knowledge of events. Though I'm a not so young student of history; I don't have enough background to put this in perspective so far. I was a small child during these events.

Honestly I had many questions about her character during the first half.

