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Finding the Beautiful Path: On Blackness, Multidimensionality, and Radical Becoming
Coles
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Finding the Beautiful Path: On Blackness, Multidimensionality, and Radical Becoming in Brampton, ON
By None
Current price: $52.09
Original price: $65.08

Coles
Finding the Beautiful Path: On Blackness, Multidimensionality, and Radical Becoming in Brampton, ON
By None
Current price: $52.09
Original price: $65.08
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
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Finding the Beautiful Path: On Blackness, Multidimensionality, and Radical becoming is memoir, which is a story of resistance, healing, and most of all love. Drawing on my lived experience and scholarly journey—from the streets of Richmond to the halls of UC Berkeley—I offer a deeply personal meditation on what it means to be Black, whole, and free in a world hellbent on your erasure. This is not just theory; it’s testimony. It’s not just critique; it’s love. Through the lenses of Critical Race Theory, trauma studies, and radical love, I trace the ways Blackness has been flattened, feared, and criminalized—while affirming Black life in its full, multidimensional radiance. This book is an offering—a radical invitation to re-member us and imagine otherwise. Because we are not nouns to be defined by trauma; we are verbs. We are movement. We are always becoming. This is the realest work I’ve ever written. Not because I had to—but because I needed to. Because finding the beautiful path is not just possible—it’s urgent. And it begins with telling the truth.
Jeremiah Sims’ “Beautiful Path” begins at the intersection of autoethnography and critical race theory where “Blackness, Multidimensionality, and Radical Becoming” collide with racism and anti-blackness. But the wounds and scars of this collision, as Dr. Sims so eloquently reveals, can ultimately heal. Autoethnography uses self-reflection and analysis of personal experiences to explore and explain larger cultural, political, social, and historical issues. Jeremiah’s cogent, compelling narratives of his experiences as a Black man, husband, father, friend, colleague, and Christian on the path to Radical Love and Becoming critically counternarratives and practices of white supremacy that only perpetuate hate and fear. —Jabari Mahiri, Ph.D., Professor of Education, UC Berkeley and Faculty Director of the Leadership Programs
Finding the Beautiful Path: On Blackness, Multidimensionality, and Radical becoming is memoir, which is a story of resistance, healing, and most of all love. Drawing on my lived experience and scholarly journey—from the streets of Richmond to the halls of UC Berkeley—I offer a deeply personal meditation on what it means to be Black, whole, and free in a world hellbent on your erasure. This is not just theory; it’s testimony. It’s not just critique; it’s love. Through the lenses of Critical Race Theory, trauma studies, and radical love, I trace the ways Blackness has been flattened, feared, and criminalized—while affirming Black life in its full, multidimensional radiance. This book is an offering—a radical invitation to re-member us and imagine otherwise. Because we are not nouns to be defined by trauma; we are verbs. We are movement. We are always becoming. This is the realest work I’ve ever written. Not because I had to—but because I needed to. Because finding the beautiful path is not just possible—it’s urgent. And it begins with telling the truth.
Jeremiah Sims’ “Beautiful Path” begins at the intersection of autoethnography and critical race theory where “Blackness, Multidimensionality, and Radical Becoming” collide with racism and anti-blackness. But the wounds and scars of this collision, as Dr. Sims so eloquently reveals, can ultimately heal. Autoethnography uses self-reflection and analysis of personal experiences to explore and explain larger cultural, political, social, and historical issues. Jeremiah’s cogent, compelling narratives of his experiences as a Black man, husband, father, friend, colleague, and Christian on the path to Radical Love and Becoming critically counternarratives and practices of white supremacy that only perpetuate hate and fear. —Jabari Mahiri, Ph.D., Professor of Education, UC Berkeley and Faculty Director of the Leadership Programs






















