Books by William J. Barber II
“Reverend Barber is an amazing person who carries on Martin Luther King’s vision. In the late 1960s, before Martin Luther King was murdered, he was getting poor people around the country, of all different colors, to come together to advocate for anti-poverty programs. Reverend Barber has carried that forward. He’s been running the Poor People’s Campaign for a couple of decades now. He goes around the country to interview people and get them organized, to talk about the experience of poverty, to make sure that it’s on the national stage and in the national conversation…He shows the deep damage of that myth — that white people are not poor, or that white people’s poverty is different than Black people’s poverty. It’s the same type of poverty. It’s the same experience. But a lot of white people get convinced that the policies and programs that harm them are not harmful because they think it only pertains to Black people.” Read more...
Interviews where books by William J. Barber II were recommended
-
1
Storming Caesars Palace: How Black Mothers Fought Their Own War on Poverty
by Annelise Orleck -
2
White Poverty: How Exposing Myths About Race and Class Can Reconstruct American Democracy
by William J. Barber II -
3
Sweet Charity? Emergency Food and the End of Entitlement
by Janet Poppendieck -
4
Big Hunger: The Unholy Alliance Between Corporate America and Anti-Hunger Groups
by Andrew Fisher -
5
Finding Me: A Memoir
by Viola Davis
The best books on Hunger in the United States, recommended by Mariana Chilton
The best books on Hunger in the United States, recommended by Mariana Chilton
Hunger in the United States is not going to be solved just by giving people more food, says Mariana Chilton, a professor of public health at Drexel University and author of The Painful Truth about Hunger in America. She recommends books to get a better understanding of hunger and argues that food banks have become part of the problem.