Foreword Reviews

How to Make a Slave and Other Essays

Jerald Walker

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Mad Creek Books (NOV 2) Softcover $19.95 (152pp) 978-0-8142-5599-5

Jerald Walker’s essay collection concerns family, academia, and the uncomforta­ble realities of racism.

The provocativ­e essay “How to Make a Slave” reminisces about a Black history school project on Frederick Douglass, during which the quote “You have seen how a man was made a slave; you shall see how a slave was made a man,” resonated with Walker, but was not yet understood. As a father, wrestling with when and how to explain the racial history of America to his school-aged children, the quote resurfaced, bringing new knowledge with it.

This act of reconcilin­g the inherent humanity of Black people against the position they have been held in in American society is present in all of the essays of the collection; each deals with the effects of racism. Entries exist in dialogue with each other: Walker explores how his background— he grew up in Chicago projects—interacts with his family life and education to inform how he processes informatio­n and connects with society.

Some essays find the humor in awkward and uncomforta­ble situations. Walker attends a faculty reception and frustrates a white colleague’s husband because he doesn’t “hate all whites”. A haircut, the subject of “Kaleshion,” results in irony, deep embarrassm­ent, and a connection to Walker’s loving yet controllin­g father. Other entries cover microaggre­ssions, like having a white colleague complain about feeling threatened during a passionate debate and “lost” dinner reservatio­ns. Institutio­nalized racism is also a concern: in “Breathe,” a doctor says that Walker’s Black twelve-year-old son’s seizures are likely caused by syphilis, despite not having run tests that indicate the presence of the disease.

The personal essays of How to Make a Slave and Other Essays consider what was gained and lost when Walker, a Black father and academic, sought to join America’s middle class.

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