We Are the Culture: Black Chicago's Influence on Everything
By (Author) Arionne Nettles
Chicago Review Press
Chicago Review Press
24th July 2024
United States
General
Non Fiction
Regional / International studies
Popular culture
Urban communities
305.896077311
Hardback
224
Width 152mm, Height 228mm, Spine 25mm
594g
Journalist Arionne Netteles believes it is time Black Chicagoan receive the acclaim, the honor, and the acknowledgment of their contributions to American culture and recognition of where they truly came from.
During the Great Migration, more than a half-million Black Americans moved from the South to Chicago, and with them, they brought the blues, amplifying what would be one of the citys greatest musical artforms. In 1958, the iconic Johnson Publishing company, the voice of Black America, launched the Ebony Fashion Fair show, leading to the creation of the first makeup brand for Black skin. For three decades starting in the 1970s, households across the country were transported to a stage in Chicago as they moved their hips in front of TV screens airing Soul Train. And in the 1990s, Hall of Famer Michael Jordan led the Chicago Bulls to six championships, including two three-peats, making the NBA a must-see attraction worldwide.
It all happened right here, in Chicago, and for the past century, Black Chicagos influence has permeated not just the city but really what we see today as modern-day pop culture throughout the country, and in some ways, the world.
Arionne Nettles is a journalism lecturer at Northwestern University's Medill School, deputy editor at nonprofit civic media organization City Bureau, and host of the A Kids Company About podcast Is That True, a kids podcast about facts. A multiplatform journalist, Nettles reports on Chicago history, culture, gun violence, policing, and race and class disparities as a contributor to the New York Times Opinion, Chicago Reader, The Trace, Medium's ZORA and Momentum, Chicago PBS station WTTW, and NPR affiliate WBEZ. Nettles is a proud member of the National Association of Black Journalists and works to teach Chicago-area teens the power of words through her organization, Write Chicago, and its "sicker than your average" writing workshops.