Essays

​Here, we spotlight essays that detail the historical and contemporaneous experiences of Black people living in the region.

Black Midwest Initiative . Black Midwest Initiative .

Langston Hughes’ Radical Ohio Youth

Taylor Dorrell

What would have become of the famous American poet Langston Hughes had he not attended Cleveland’s Central High School during those turbulent years of 1916 and 1920?

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Black Midwest Initiative . Black Midwest Initiative .

Beyond Chicago’s Sustainable Square Mile

Audrey Henderson

The holistic village-building vision of Blacks in Green, founded in 2007 in the West Woodlawn community on Chicago’s South Side includes eight essential principles that drive the work and vision of its founder Naomi Davis: wealth, energy, products, homestead, culture, organization, education and economy.

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Black Midwest Initiative . Black Midwest Initiative .

Three Chicago Sonnets

By D.A. Hosek

Father Pfleger sits at the piano keyboard and fingers a diminished seventh.

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Black Midwest Initiative . Black Midwest Initiative .

Crossroads of Desire

Jennifer Sdunzik

The beginning of the twentieth century marks a time when many southern Black people started to contemplate alternatives to sharecropping by moving out of the South, sparking what is commonly known as the Great Migration.

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Black Midwest Initiative . Black Midwest Initiative .

Bird in Kansas City

Ian Ritter

Magnus Lindgren is baffled that Kansas City doesn’t have a street named after saxophonist Charlie Parker.

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Black Midwest Initiative . Black Midwest Initiative .

Chicago Dream Houses

Siobhan Moroney

In its Sunday, September 30th edition, the Chicago Tribune in 1945 announced a major project for the benefit of the city and its surrounding suburbs.

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Hair and History in ‘Akron’s Harlem

Yanick Rice Lamb

Hair has history. These coils of memory bond children to the adults in their lives in places they call home, including hair salons and barber shops.

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Letter from St. Paul: On the Complex Flavors of Black Joy

Michael Kleber-Diggs

When I survey the sky around me, I don’t see towers of smoke. I see something resembling the way things were. I wonder what the country would be like if George Floyd hadn’t been killed or if we had sheltered in place a little longer. But he was, and we didn’t.

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Columbus, Ohio is My Home

Saeed Jones

“Why Columbus?” you ask? How much time do you have? The thing is, my explanation is always iridescent, taking on the color of the person asking as well as my mood and the moment itself. The answers are legion and varied; the answers are all the truth. And so, this one is for Columbus and all the colors of why.

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When Black Death Goes Viral

Tiera Chantè Tanksley

Concerned about how seeing images of Black people dead and dying would affect young social media users, Tanksley conducted a study to understand how digitally mediated traumas were impacting Black girls’ mental and emotional wellness.

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Peeling Back the Myth of a “White” Midwest

Britt Halvorson and Josh Reno

The popular image of the U.S. heartland as only a place of rural, hardworking white farmers has always been a larger-than-life myth. In a new book, Imagining the Heartland, two anthropologists show how these seemingly banal portrayals of the Midwest perpetuate white supremacy.

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The 1539 Project

Christy Clark-Pujara, Ashley Howard and Erik S. McDuffie

In 1539, an enslaved African set foot in what we today we call Nebraska as part of a Spanish expedition.

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Anna, Illinois​

​​A.D. Carson

Southern Illinois is distinct from the rest of the state because of its curious history, which not only includes the racial violence in Cairo, but it is also one of the very few places in what is now known as the Land of Lincoln where slavery was permitted

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​Christina Long Is Opening Up the Mosh Pit for Black Women

​Amirah Mercer

Because in the metal community, especially out in the Midwest, the racism is a little different. People are not afraid to be vocal when they see something they don’t like. So we would walk into a show out there and a big bearded dude might say, “There’s a black person in here! I can’t believe it! What are you doing here?”

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​​​​Living LGBT in the Midwest in the Time of Trump

​Aaron Foley

I don’t want to say we’re stagnant. But being set in your ways, I guess, doesn’t always make for fruitful conversation. Especially here in Detroit. Each time I go out as a black male, I always have to prepare myself for the following

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​Hip Hop in Peoria: A Photo Essay

​​Josh Birnbaum

Before you dismiss Peoria rappers as having little to rap about, consider that nearly half of the city’s black residents live below the poverty line and that Peoria’s violent crime rate is the fourth highest in Illinois.

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​What it's like to be black in Naperville, America​

​Brian Crooks

people can be totally cool for years and years but suddenly decide that they need to be super racist because they want to hurt you. They'll say they're sorry, they'll explain how you misinterpreted what they said, but the fact is, they reach for racism because they think it'll emotionally and psychologically destroy you, and that's what they want to do at that moment.

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