On Raising Black Children and School Violence: Excerpted from LIVING WHILE BLACK
March 17th, 2022 | by Guilaine Kinouani
“The teacher said my hair is too big—I can’t wear a hat, and I need to change it, or I won’t be in the school play."
March 17th, 2022 | by Guilaine Kinouani
“The teacher said my hair is too big—I can’t wear a hat, and I need to change it, or I won’t be in the school play."
May 27th, 2021 | by Cheryl Klein
Lovely daughter for adoption, says the caption
April 23rd, 2021 | by Cheryl Klein
From the back seat, my son's toothbrush blinked in red staccato to let him know how long to brush, and I thought of police cars.
January 26th, 2021 | by Cheryl Klein
I know there’s a simple solution to this quagmire, which is to turn off the TV (not so simple during month eleven of quarantine) or at least to disable YouTube
September 8th, 2020 | by Cheryl Klein
I have to queue up the apps, but he wants to do it himself. He screams, “It’s my tablet! Let go of my tablet!” I snatch it away. He hits me in the face.
July 30th, 2020 | by Jennifer Jordán Schaller
Strangers' questions imply that someone needs to keep watch over me, a Brown lady holding a white baby.
June 8th, 2020 | by Ezra Stone
We at Mutha Magazine stand with the Movement for Black Lives: with black folks, black families, black writers and artists,
February 14th, 2020 | by Rachel Masilamani
"You look different today." A comic about being biracial and mothers, daughters, and comments on #beauty
August 10th, 2019 | by Ezra Stone
Earlier this summer, I read an advance reader copy of For Black Girls Like Me, Mariama Lockington’s glorious debut YA novel.
July 9th, 2019 | by Hayley DeRoche
This is simply not the way we are taught to speak about race: forthright, out-loud, before anything else