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A More Just Future: Psychological Tools for Reckoning with Our Past and Driving Social Change
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A More Just Future: Psychological Tools for Reckoning with Our Past and Driving Social Change
Current price: $19.99
Barnes and Noble
A More Just Future: Psychological Tools for Reckoning with Our Past and Driving Social Change
Current price: $19.99
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Size: Audiobook
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Winner of the 2024 Getting To We Words Create Worlds Award
In the vein of
Think Again
and
Do Better
, a revolutionary, “welcome, and urgent invitation” (Angela Duckworth, #1
New York Times
bestselling author)
to explore the emotional relationship we have with our country’s complicated and whitewashed history so that we can build a better future.
As we grapple with news stories about our country’s racial fault lines, our challenge is not just to learn about the past, but also to cope with the “belief grief” that unlearning requires. If you are on the emotional journey of reckoning with the past, such as the massacre of Black Americans in Tulsa, the killing of Native American children in compulsory “residential schools” designed to destroy their culture, and the incarceration of Japanese Americans, you are not alone. The seeds of today’s inequalities were sown in past events like these. The time to unlearn the whitewashed history we believed was true is now.
As historians share these truths, we will need psychologists to help us navigate the shame, guilt, disbelief, and despair many of us feel. In
A More Just Future
, Dolly Chugh, award-winning professor, social psychologist, and author of the acclaimed
The Person You Mean to Be
, invites us to dismantle the systems built by our forebearers and work toward a more just future.
Through heartrending personal histories and practical advice, Chugh gives us the psychological tools we need to grapple with the truth of our country with “one of the most moving and important behavioral science books of the last decade” (Katy Milkman, author of
How to Change
).
In the vein of
Think Again
and
Do Better
, a revolutionary, “welcome, and urgent invitation” (Angela Duckworth, #1
New York Times
bestselling author)
to explore the emotional relationship we have with our country’s complicated and whitewashed history so that we can build a better future.
As we grapple with news stories about our country’s racial fault lines, our challenge is not just to learn about the past, but also to cope with the “belief grief” that unlearning requires. If you are on the emotional journey of reckoning with the past, such as the massacre of Black Americans in Tulsa, the killing of Native American children in compulsory “residential schools” designed to destroy their culture, and the incarceration of Japanese Americans, you are not alone. The seeds of today’s inequalities were sown in past events like these. The time to unlearn the whitewashed history we believed was true is now.
As historians share these truths, we will need psychologists to help us navigate the shame, guilt, disbelief, and despair many of us feel. In
A More Just Future
, Dolly Chugh, award-winning professor, social psychologist, and author of the acclaimed
The Person You Mean to Be
, invites us to dismantle the systems built by our forebearers and work toward a more just future.
Through heartrending personal histories and practical advice, Chugh gives us the psychological tools we need to grapple with the truth of our country with “one of the most moving and important behavioral science books of the last decade” (Katy Milkman, author of
How to Change
).