**New York Times Editor's Choice
Ray & Pat Browne Award for Best Work in Popular Culture and American
Culture
NAACP Image Award Finalist
Books for a Better Life Award Finalist
Northern California Book Award Finalist
**
Over the past half-century, the U.S. has seen profound demographic and
cultural change. But racial progress still seems distant. After the
faith of the civil rights movement, the fervor of multiculturalism, and
even the brief euphoria of a "post-racial" moment, we remain a nation
divided. Resegregation is the norm. The culture wars flare as hot as
ever. How do Americans see race now? Do we see each other any more
clearly than before? In a powerful, original, and timely telling, Jeff
Chang--the award-winning author of Can't Stop Won't Stop: A History of
the Hip-Hop Generation--looks anew at the tumultuous half-century from
the peak of the civil rights era to the colorization and strife of the
Obama years. He uncovers a hidden history of American arts, cultural,
and social movements that have changed the ways we see each other. Who
We Be is at once beautiful and shocking, disquieting and hopeful, even
as it urges us to reconsider the yet-unanswered question of how we might
all get along.