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Invisible Blackness with Adrian Younge

Adrian Younge | Amazon Music
Invisible Blackness with Adrian Younge
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  • Beyond the Black Psyche
    Racism has fermented into an ever-evolving system that is difficult to recognize, without the right sensors. The pressure has been boiling for centuries and something must change. Ostensibly, the oppressed must recognize pressure, in order to push back; we must understand why racism exists and how to overcome our obstacles. Conversely, we must smile and enjoy how precious life is in order for us to feel freedom we’ve been fighting for.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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  • Say Somethin'
    The end of slavery marks the rise of a secularized Black American culture; a transition whereby secularization found the Black community creating its own social systems. Nevertheless, these systems were created in an atmosphere that falsely blamed Black Americans as the cause of our bloodiest war to date, the Civil War. Did retribution have anything to do with the fact that segregated cemeteries refused to bury our dead?See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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  • The Cancer of America
    Within the first 150 years of Colonial America, it was clearly established that Blacks had no place in America, short of being the property of white colonists. Slave codes were established to divide and conquer, moreover, to separate the lower class by making poor whites identify social status with skin color. This sectarian view fermented complacency towards the plight of Black America. Black Lives did not matter, but in reality, they were America’s greatest asset. By 1850, enslaved Americans were worth $1.3 billion or one-fifth of the nation’s wealth. Within a decade, human collateral exceeded $3 billion and was worth more than the nation’s banks, railroads, mills and factories combined. The South (the Confederacy) seceded to maintain a system of oppression, for profit, at the expense of Black livelihood. The Civil War was fought to protect the financial interests of a racist south. In the battle of North vs. South, America fought its bloodiest war to date. When the South lost, they lost everything. Blacks were “emancipated” and lands were forfeited. Organizations, like the Ku Klux Klan, were established to enforce perpetual retribution against the enslaved that betrayed them. In the North, Blacks were also targeted as being seen as the source of our deadliest war. We became the cancer of America. Why did the institutions of America replace “Slave Codes” with “Black Codes (Jim Crow Laws)?” How did America become so desensitized and shielded behind the precepts of “necessary evil?” Why is President Lincoln canonized as a humanitarian even though he’s professed his indifference towards the institution of slavery? How did the Black consciousness evolve under the purview of freedom?See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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  • Predetermined Prejudice
    In order to fully grasp the concepts behind Invisible Blackness, this episode breaks down the etiology of institutionalized racism. Race is a fallacy; nevertheless, the concept of race has been used to codify the dehumanization of Black Americans for 400 years. Even though predetermined prejudice existed before the transatlantic slave trade, America engineered a unique enigma, designed to dehumanize Blacks as expendable chattel. This optic has been engrained in the American psyche with a myriad of practices that still exist to this day. In 1619, the first recorded delivery of “20 & odd Negroes” came as servants, better defined as enslaved Africans. At the time, racism was essentially non-existent in America. Soon thereafter, avaricious desires catalyzed a movement to establish racism as a means of exploitation and control over non-white Americans. Ironically, America enlisted Blacks to fight under a Declaration of Independence against British oppression. While our government declared that “All men are created equally,” the enslaving Framers never sought to apply such protections to Black America. How did the slave codes establish the institution of racism? Why does the concept of “Double Oppression,” plague Black women today? Eugenically speaking, were Blacks ever considered humans in America? Is Drapetomania a relevant concept of today? How did the American Revolution galvanize the Black consciousness of young America? Stay tuned for deliberation on this week's episode of "Invisible Blackness with Adrian Younge."See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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  • Follow the Money, an Interview with Estelle
    British singer/songwriter Estelle began as a rapper in London. She rose to international fame, keeping her African and West Indian roots intact. In this episode, Adrian and Estelle discuss the African diaspora, Britain's National Front and Parallels between the racial justice movements in the UK and the United states. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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The Amazon Original podcast “Invisible Blackness with Adrian Younge” documents the development and evolution of racism in America. This miniseries analyzes the Black consciousness with new historical parallels to the future and the past. Join Adrian Younge weekly for reflection, accompanied by interviews of Black Filmmakers, Actors, Musicians, and Scholars.Listen to the songs that inspired Adrian Younge during the creation of the podcast, only on Amazon Music.
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