“Stacey Patton lays bare—with searing text and haunting images—the unspoken script behind ‘the talk’ Black parents give their children about surviving a world where driving or walking while Black still carries danger. She traces how European child-rearing traditions helped create the very cultural logic that made the abuse of Black children seem permissible, even justified. As Patton shows, white parents once believed harsh discipline protected their own children from evil; that same belief system ultimately helped fuel the racism, exploitation, and terror inflicted on Black children and their families. This book is essential reading—an unflinching examination of the roots of racialized harm and the urgent need to confront it.”
—Mary Frances Berry, author of History Teaches Us to Resist: How Progressive Movements Have Succeeded in Challenging Times
“Strung Up is one of the boldest, most searingly honest examinations of racial terror and trauma ever put to paper. Herein, Stacey Patton has provided us with a history largely unspoken until now but broadly embedded in the cell memory of the nation, passed down as a haunting inheritance of cruelty and its consequences—sadism not as deviation from an otherwise caring and compassionate norm but as the norm itself. It is not an easy read, but it is a necessary one. As our so-called leaders move to censor history, erase memory, and purge conscience from America, it will take courageous truth tellers like Patton to redeem what is left of our nation’s soul. Here’s hoping we are worthy of being redeemed.”
—Tim Wise, author of White Like Me: Reflections on Race from a Privileged Son and Dispatches from the Race War
“Strung Up is a heart-wrenching but necessary examination of how children have been and are used as vehicles for indoctrination into this country’s long-standing tradition of white supremacy. Do not turn away—bearing unflinching witness to the violence that disciplines us into submission, and the why behind it, can be the key to ending this, once and for all.”
—Alicia Garza, cofounder, Black Lives Matter Global Network
“In powerful and unforgettable prose, Strung Up forces a reckoning with one of the most devastating truths in American history: Racial violence has never been about punishment but rather it was and is a weapon of domination, an object lesson on power and submission, especially for the young. By centering the experiences of Black children as victims of lynching and white children as its witnesses, Stacey Patton shows that violence has been a civic project meant to reproduce white supremacy one generation to the next.”
—Khalil Gibran Muhammad, professor of African American studies and public affairs, Princeton University
“Strung Up is an argumentative masterpiece whose civilizational reproach beggars scholastic punctiliousness. Chapter eight—‘Pediatric Experiments, Birth Records, and the War on Southern Black Midwives’—shows federal law transmogrified by clinicians and birth-record bureaucrats into a white supremacist century. To quote Patton: ‘Doctors and bureaucrats traded ropes for scalpels, torches for birth certificates, and refined white supremacy into a clinical [American] project.’ Strung Up, a necessary but terrible read.”
—David Levering Lewis, author of the two-volume Pulitzer Prize–winning W. E. B. Du Bois
“Strung Up is a monumental text. With stunning intellectual, political, and moral clarity, Stacey Patton has provided the first full-fledged examination of Black child lynching in the United States. Anchored in history but in deep conversation with a dazzling array of disciplines and traditions, the book spotlights the wide range of forces that have normalized America’s long-standing and unyielding war on Black children and Black childhood. This book is beautifully written, persuasively argued, and desperately needed.”
—Marc Lamont Hill, Presidential Professor of Urban Education and Black, Race, and Ethnic Studies, City University of New York Graduate Center