For this post, I have selected the new Netflix show "#blackAF" and the concept of a networked counterpublic. Dr. Sarah Jackson discussed this concept in a video on our course blog that came from her extensive research on hashtag activism, particularly in the Black community. According to our course reading, a networked counterpublic intends to draw mainstream attention to the needs and voices of marginalized communities. Examples include #BlackLivesMatter, #SayHerName, and #Oscars SoWhite. "#blackAF" is no exception. In the new Netflix series named after that networked hashtag , released in its entirety April 17, 2020, an affluent Black family navigates the privileges and struggles of wealth in a society founded upon race stratification that tokenizes Black success. According to a CNN article: " The main preoccupation of '#blackAF' is the spiritual and intellectual challenge that being filthy rich poses, as Barris luxuriates in his opulent ...
For our last reading and discussion topic this semester, it is significant that we were planning to discuss stereotypes of Asian Americans during our last week, even prior to the increased racism perpetuated on Asian Americans following misperceptions of COVID-19. As with earlier posts, please read through the material from all the links (including the one in the previous sentence) and view the included videos to contribute in an informed, respectful conversation below or on the Scholar discussion forum. We begin with a screening of this clip sharing some of the history in which the myth of Asian Americans as the " model minority " emerged. An article from the Urban Institute illuminates some of the economic realities that debunk the myth. Research published by the National Association of Independents Schools provides tools to intervene in the myth from an education context. Highlights from Ch. 39: “Are Asian Americans Becoming ‘White’”? by Min Zhou: Zhou ...