Like A Tree Without Roots - Softcover

Willis, Teresa Ann

 
9780988440340: Like A Tree Without Roots

Inhaltsangabe

This emotionally wrenching debut novel dissects the interior world of Jasmine Simmons, an African American teenager, whose hatred of her dark skin and kinky hair propels her on a journey of self-love and acceptance. It's the last week of school for Jasmine and her African, Haitian, Puerto Rican, Jamaican and Dominican classmates. While sitting in class, Jasmine tries to will herself invisible as her teacher reads an article about a group of Black girls who, when shown a Black doll, start screaming and scampering. The article ran in Frederick Douglass's Paper. In 1853! School is about to begin again, and Jasmine is shaken to her core as she watches a 2005 film featuring little Black girls and boys reacting with shame and rejection when presented with a Black doll, even as they openly embrace a white doll. Jasmine knows well their shame since she spent her entire childhood longing to get her skin bleached, just like her classmate, Gavin. At age eight, Jasmine began secretly straightening her hair with a hot comb since she couldn't figure out how to use the relaxer kit stashed in her mom's closet. Throughout the novel, Jasmine is tormented by the evil voice inside that constantly reminds her of her racial inferiority. But after spending time with her grandmother, and after beginning a two-year rite of passage program with other girls who share her pain of being dark-skinned in a world that privileges and prizes light skin, Jasmine begins to see herself through new eyes. At the heart of Like A Tree Without Roots is the story of the untreated trauma of African descended people. Their rich, improvisational yet often tragic history is woven throughout the narrative, making it an achingly gritty yet brilliantly triumphant story of affirmation and healing.

Die Inhaltsangabe kann sich auf eine andere Ausgabe dieses Titels beziehen.

Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Teresa is an author and Transformative Educator who, along with a committed group of parents and teachers, is giving birth to Middle Passage – a private school serving a public mission. Teresa has dedicated her life to engaging marginalized children and youth, and to developing innovative curricula for students in schools and in out-of-school-time programs. Teresa’s work has taken her into the world of New York City middle- and high-school students who claimed Blood, Crip and Latin King as identities that gave their lives meaning and hope along with much despair and anguish as evidenced by this quote from a 16-year-old son, brother, student and gang member: “Miss, I know it says in the oath that you’re not supposed to show fear, but I’m not gonna lie to you, when he put that gun to my head, I started begging for my life”. Teresa wrote her first book, It’s All Good! Daily Affirmations for Teens, because of the murder of an 11-year-old Chicago boy — a child she didn’t know, but really, knew all too well. Prior to her extensive intervention work with children and youth, Teresa worked as a journalist for the Los Angeles Times and The Morning Call newspapers. Like A Tree Without Roots is her first novel.

„Über diesen Titel“ kann sich auf eine andere Ausgabe dieses Titels beziehen.