“Janine de Novais has given us the model we need to free us from our comfort zones, confront difficult truths, expose the paper-thin foundations, lies, and distortions upon which racism is built, and cultivate a post-racist imagination.”
—From the Foreword by Robin D. G. Kelley, Distinguished Professor and Gary B. Nash Endowed Chair in U.S. History, UCLA
“With Brave Community, Dr. Janine de Novais opens a pathway from the cultural quagmire of current race relations to a viable and practical post-racist future. She activates our longing for collective capacity to be with our differences, traumas, and lineages in ways that bring us into a coherent whole—and then gives us a step-by-step practice to help anyone in any community to transform their relationships. Grateful for this thinking and these tools.”
—adrienne maree brown, writer, activist, and New York Times bestselling author, Pleasure Activism and Emergent Strategy
“Straightforward, candid, approachable, and informed by years of practice, this book will be a go-to resource for years to come.”
—Eve L. Ewing, writer; sociologist, University of Chicago; and author, Ghost in the Schoolyard, 1919, and Electric Arches
“Dr. Janine de Novais is a formidable voice in developing a pedagogy for understanding racism in our communities. In Brave Community, Dr. de Novais precisely maps out how the classroom can serve as a space for liberation and community-building across educational, cultural, and social settings. It is a guidebook and a methodology that is instructional and inspirational.”
—Thelma Golden, director and chief curator, The Studio Museum in Harlem
“With Brave Community, Janine de Novais gives us an essential guide to building a better world. At a time when the very language we use to talk about our experiences is being contested and even banned, de Novais, driven by a sense of justice and deep care, provides a needed tool for fighting back.”
—Chanda Prescod-Weinstein, theoretical physicist, University of New Hampshire; author, The Disordered Cosmos: A Journey into Dark Matter, Spacetime, and Dreams Deferred