essays
Where Real Kids and Real Teachers Can Only Dream of Real Education
Jerald Isseks · 09/28/13 01:08PMA. At a conference called "Making Language Arts More Relevant," I sit listening to the keynote speaker talk to us about how high school graduates don’t know how to capitalize the first words of sentences. This woman is the director of human resources at a cybersecurity firm located near the high school where I teach. She is talking to us about what successful job candidates’ reading and writing looks like. We sit at our tables, listening.
Rich Juzwiak · 09/27/13 12:35PM
A Letter in Reply: Dear Mychal, Darnell, Kiese, Kai, and Marlon
Àdisà Àjàmú · 09/21/13 11:38AMI've read the previous essays you've written for Gawker's True Stories series and I just read your collective piece, “Echo” in Kiese’s new book, How to Slowly Kill Yourself and Others in America. I heard, and really felt, the sinew of pain and joy in your autobiographical offerings and would like to respond with my own.
Confessions of a Recovering Black Debutante
Regina N. Bradley · 09/14/13 10:50AMI'm a recovering debutante. I wouldn't go as far as saying a belle because I ain't with that frilly froo froo. Or girdles. I have a brain and I use it. I don’t own too many slips, or dresses, or wear much white. I don’t own a lacy parasol except for that one time where I had to accessorize with my lace ribbons for my annual Olan Mills photo.
Eli Valley · 09/07/13 07:08AM
Dear Khary (An Autobiography of Gentrification),
Dr. Jasmine Elizabeth Johnson · 08/31/13 09:44AMHis Story Repeats Itself
Andie Karras · 08/24/13 02:46PMWhat Do I Tell My Blond Son About Being Black?
Anita DeRouen · 08/17/13 11:39AMWriting a Gay Marriage Paper for Naked Jim
Brandon Ambrosino · 08/10/13 08:57AMBill Clinton and the Sport of Hating Poorness
Ria Fay-Berquist · 08/03/13 12:17PMIn 1998, during a staff meeting at my first off-white collar job, tele-fundraising for arts programming in neglected city schools, someone brought up President Bill Clinton. I rolled my 20-year-old eyes and said, “Like he ever did anything for poor kids.” The woman sitting to my right, who got under folks’ skin in such a way that the phrase I’m not going to jail for her was often uttered, stepped to his defense.
A Hollywood Ending
Maccabee Montandon · 07/27/13 08:00AMOn Trayvon Martin and Our Fear of Smiling Black Men
Jozen Cummings · 07/20/13 03:52PMVia Negativa: Poetic Notes on White Boy Privilege
Michael Mlekoday · 07/06/13 04:03PM"I Am Sorry That It Has Come to This": A Soldier's Last Words
Daniel Somers · 06/22/13 10:12AMDaniel Somers was a veteran of Operation Iraqi Freedom. He was part of Task Force Lightning, an intelligence unit. In 2004-2005, he was mainly assigned to a Tactical Human-Intelligence Team (THT) in Baghdad, Iraq, where he ran more than 400 combat missions as a machine gunner in the turret of a Humvee, interviewed countless Iraqis ranging from concerned citizens to community leaders and and government officials, and interrogated dozens of insurgents and terrorist suspects. In 2006-2007, Daniel worked with Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC) through his former unit in Mosul where he ran the Northern Iraq Intelligence Center. His official role was as a senior analyst for the Levant (Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, Israel, and part of Turkey). Daniel suffered greatly from PTSD and had been diagnosed with traumatic brain injury and several other war-related conditions. On June 10, 2013, Daniel wrote the following letter to his family before taking his life. Daniel was 30 years old. His wife and family have given permission to publish it.
Getting Sued by American Express Led Me Out of the Ruins of My Life
Nathan Rabin · 06/20/13 03:53PMThe Fatness of James Gandolfini: Inspiring, Iconic, and Probably Fatal
Lucas Mann · 06/20/13 02:19PMI never met James Gandolfini. His work as Tony Soprano strikes me as a unique and staggering artistic achievement, but I am a non-expert fan, with no experience in acting or television. To my surprise, though, he is the first celebrity whose death has touched me in that way that celebrity deaths seem to touch people.
Master Bedroom, Extra Closet: The Truth About Gay Marriage
Steven W. Thrasher · 06/19/13 02:24PMAny day now, possibly as soon as tomorrow, the Supreme Court of the United States will rule on whether or not access to civil marriage is the law of the land for any adult couple, gay or straight. If they do rule in favor of marriage equality, they can hardly be charged with being "activist judges," out of step with the average Joe. Instead, they'll be hurrying to catch up with a change in American perceptions on same-sex marriage that has been staggering.