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Black Books & Literature: Identity, Access, and Book Bans
Episode 32nd March 2026 • Blacktivities • Shannon Chatmon, Talisa Hale, and Karen Roberts
00:00:00 00:51:57

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There was a time in the U.S. when Black people could be punished for learning to read. Today, books by Black authors are among the most challenged in schools. In this episode, we talk about Black literature, how it shapes identity, and why access to our stories has always mattered.

In this episode we discuss:

  1. Anti-literacy laws during slavery and why literacy was seen as “dangerous”
  2. Frederick Douglass (1845) and Harriet Jacobs (1861) as examples of early Black narrative documentation
  3. The Harlem Renaissance (Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston)
  4. Why representation in books matters for identity development
  5. Modern book bans and what it means when access to stories is restricted
  6. Keisha’s recommendations across genres, plus why “listening is still reading”

Listener question: What’s the first Black book that made you feel seen?

Guest: Keisha Green

Instagram: @plantedbookedrooted

📚 Keisha’s Recommendations:

- Fast by Millie Belizaire https://a.co/d/032SKqAK

- Gravity by AshleyNicole https://a.co/d/00tISPDN

- Dominion by Addie E Citchens https://a.co/d/02W15LfX

- Sing, Unburied, Sing by Jesmyn Ward https://a.co/d/0h2K27c8

- Last Stop From Innocence by Takerra Allen https://a.co/d/05MYnhi9

- Secret World of Maggie Grey by Granger https://a.co/d/0d1tjGKG

- Losin' Control by Ladii Nesha https://a.co/d/0b6w8vlP

- Razorblade Tears by S.A. Cosby https://a.co/d/084XkbG4

- Savvy Summers by Sandra Jackson-Opaoku https://a.co/d/0iXHNezx

Banned Book List: https://pen.org/book-bans/



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About the Hosts


Blacktivities is a Black Panache original production - a podcast network with a lineup of black-hosted shows sharing black stories and tackling black issues. For more information on shows like our newest production, Fat Lies Matter, visit blackpanache.com.


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Sources mentioned in this episode:

  1. Zinn Education Project – “April 7, 1831: Virginia Literacy Ban Enacted” (on Virginia’s anti‑literacy law for enslaved and free Black people after Nat Turner’s rebellion, and why white lawmakers feared Black literacy).​

https://www.zinnedproject.org/news/tdih/virginia-literacy-ban-enacted/


  1. National Humanities Center – “Frederick Douglass and Harriet Jacobs: American Slave Narrators” (overview of slave narratives written by Douglass and Jacobs, and how first‑person accounts by enslaved people documented slavery from the inside).​

https://nationalhumanitiescenter.org/education-material/frederick-douglass-and-harriet-jacobs-american-slave-narrators/

  1. Margo Anderson & Robert A. Margo – “Race and Schooling in the South: A Review of the Evidence” (National Bureau of Economic Research; documents rapid gains in Black literacy after emancipation and majority literacy by around 1900).​

https://www.nber.org/system/files/chapters/c8792/c8792.pdf

  1. Encyclopaedia‑style overview of the Harlem Renaissance and Black literature (for context on Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, James Baldwin, Toni Morrison, Beloved, and Morrison’s 1993 Nobel Prize in Literature as the first Black woman laureate).​

https://www.britannica.com/summary/Harlem-Renaissance-Causes-and-Effects

  1. PEN America – “The 10 Most Banned Books of the 2021–2022 School Year” (on thousands of school book bans since 2021 and frequently banned titles including The Bluest Eye and The Hate U Give).​

https://pen.org/banned-books-list-2022/

  1. Smith College – “The Role of Fictional Narratives in Adolescent Identity Formation” (research on how stories and representation in books shape identity, belonging, and self‑concept in young readers).​

https://scholarworks.smith.edu/theses/653/



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