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Framing the Climate Justice Story

Tuesday, November 23rd, 2010

As movements around the planet mobilize to counter the effects of climate destabilization on their communities, cultures, and ecosystems, a framing battle of global significance is underway.

In the climate fight, as with so many other struggles, the heart of the framing battle is naming the problem, since how we define the problem determines what solutions are possible. To varying degrees, governments and multinational corporations around the world have acknowledged the crisis and they claim they are working to address it. However, they present the climate crisis through a reductionist lens as merely a problem of too much carbon in the atmosphere while ignoring the underlying issues of justice, equity, and humanity’s relationship with the Earth. This framing allows exploitation of the crisis to justify escalating the very policies and practices that have pushed the planet to the brink. Essentially the world’s richest countries and companies are co-opting environmental rhetoric to put a PR friendly “green” face on the same old politics of unlimited economic growth, resource thefts and corporate exploitation.

Meanwhile the ‘official’ climate movement has been dominated by a loyal opposition of largely northern, policy, and access-oriented NGOs who, although (mostly) well intentioned, have failed to reframe the debate or address the root causes of the crisis. But increasingly as more global movements begin to unite under the banner of climate justice, there is a different story to tell. The terms of the debate are being reframed from seeing the climate crisis as an isolated issue, to understanding the disruption of the climate as merely the most visible symptom of a much larger problem: our global system of growth-addicted, fossil fuel-driven, corporate capitalism that is undermining all the life support systems of the planet.

When this deeper framing of the problem is accepted it becomes clear that we will never re-stabilize the climate without addressing the roots of the problem. This means acknowledging the Global North’s historic responsibility for the problem (“climate debt”) as the first step towards fundamental shifts to our economy, political systems, and cultural assumptions. This is why one of the over-arching and unifying messages coming out of global movements fighting for a just response to the climate crisis is “system change NOT climate change”.

However, as people’s movements around the world ramp up their organizing in the lead up to the next round of United Nations negotiations in Cancun there are a number of dangerous frames––control myths––that must be challenged.

Control Myth #1 Only The Market Can Save Us!

In this case a global carbon market that effectively privatizes the atmosphere, justifies massive land grabs and further commodification of forests, soils, and grasslands. Two hundred years of ideology have bestowed the “invisible hand” of the market with debate-shaping qualities of alleged efficiency, fairness and power. This is a familiar narrative to many of our movements fighting privatization and displacement but we still need better, shared strategies to reframe the myth of the market.

Control Myth #2 Technology Will Save Us!

Hand in hand with the story of the all-powerful market is the obsession with techno-fixes. Techno-fixes masquerade as solutions but just distract us from making the fundamental changes that are needed. The assumption that some benign “experts” will provide new, innovative technology to solve the problem justifies continuing unsustainable policies while removing people’s agency from the frame. More and more climate techno-fixes are being proposed: from overt lies like “clean coal” and “climate ready” genetically engineered crops to terrifyingly disruptive, untested new technologies like synthetic biology and geoengineering.[i] Beware!

Control Myth #3 Climate Is Too Big An Issue: Only Governments Can Save Us!

The debate has been overly focused on global and national policy while social movements and community-based responses are left out of the frame. Many mainstream environmentalists have even argued that any global emission reduction agreement (regardless of how weak or unfair) is better than no deal. Variations of this narrative have been used (particularly by the U.S.) to evade historic responsibility and blame China, India and other developing economies for blocking an international deal. Certainly a global agreement is important, but the reality of the scale of the climate crisis is that we need transformative action in all sectors of society.

Given the wide-ranging implications of the debate, climate is an essential arena for our movements to develop more holistic narratives and shared frames that mutually reinforce efforts across different sectors and struggles. At the heart of this framing battle is the emerging climate justice movement led by frontline impacted communities, indigenous movements and environmental justice organizers.

Climate justice framing is challenging the control myths above (and many more) by refocusing the issue on the core problems of fossil fuel addiction, the ongoing legacy of historic inequities and the need for systemic change. At the center of the evolving narrative is the role of community-based solutions in stewarding a just transition towards a society that is both sustainable and just. As different movements like migrants rights, reproductive justice and organized labor articulate the connections between their struggles and the climate crisis there are many opportunities to experiment with applying and broadening climate justice framing.

With the historic adoption of the Cochabamba People’s Agreement on Climate Change and the Rights of Mother Earth in April there is now a powerful new narrative emerging that unites ecology, justice and social movement action. This platform offers a potent counterpoint to the corporate driven, false solutions of the United Nations process. Most importantly it offers an invitation to organizers everywhere to connect their issues with this multi-faceted struggle to transform our world. In the words of one of the key slogans uniting movements in the lead up to the COP-16 meeting and beyond: “grassroots organizing cools the planet!”

[i] For a good summary of “false solutions” to the climate crisis check out Rising Tide North America’s Hoodwinked in the Hothouse: False Solutions to Climate Change. Other resources for tracking the rebranding of failed GMO seeds as “climate ready” can be found by following the ongoing work of Food First!/Institute for Food and Development Policy and the Organic Consumers Association. To learn more about the latest developments in the emerging fields of synthetic biology and geoengineering check out two recent reports by global technology watchdog ETC Group Geopiracy: The Case Against Geoengineering (Oct 2010) and The New Biomassters: Synthetic Biology and the Next Assault on Biodiversity and Livelihoods (Nov 2010) both of which are available at www.etcgroup.org. For updates on the ongoing resistance to geoengineering check out the international H.O.M.E. campaign.

smartMeme @ the USSF!

Thursday, June 10th, 2010

Join smartMeme and 1,000+ other social justice organizations in Detroit for the US Social Forum June 22-26th…

The biggest, badest, boldest convergence of 2010!


SmartMeme’s Featured USSF Events both are slated for

THURSDAY JUNE 24:

smartMeme Workshop - Thurs. 6/24 10 am - 12 pm

Story-based Strategy: How Grassroots Organizers Can Win the Battle of the Story
Cobo Hall, room DO-03D

Book Release Party - Thurs. 6/24 6-8 pm

Free food & cash bar!

Celebrate smartMeme’s Re:Imagining Change @ the Majestic Cafe

4120 Woodward Ave between Mack & Warren, Detroit 48201

RSVP on Facebook

SmartMeme is also a collaborator on the Echo-Justice Project and the Narrative Peoples Movement Assembly!

** Join us by taking a quick framing strategies survey and participating in the peoples’ movement assembly:

Narrative Peoples Movement Assembly

Friday June 25 1:00pm - 5:00pm

Media Justice Dreamz/Echo Justice: Building Movement through Building Meaning

Cobo Hall: D2-08

With: Center for Media Justice, smartMeme, Praxis Project & Progressive Communicators Network

This PMA is about elevating framing and story-based strategies a key methods to advance media justice and build social justice movements!

More Great USSF Stuff From smartMeme’s Friends and Fam:

WEDNESDAY JUNE 23

Movement Generation - Eco-Justice 101: Ecological Crises, Impacts on Communities of Color, and Strategies for the Future

10 AM - 12 PM
AFL-CIO Canopy
Communities of color stand to be first and worst impacted by the multiple ecological crises that are developing today. These crises: of water scarcity and pollution, climate change, waste and toxic pollution, food and agriculture, and the loss of biological and cultural diversity, are a result of the same systems that have driven exploitation and oppression in our communities. They demand the urgent attention of our leaders and organizers as we build our resistance and fight for a better tomorrow. This workshop, which will feature audiovisual presentation, small group discussion, and interactive exercises, will explore: 1. What are these developing crises? 2. How will they impact low-income communities of color in the US and globally? 3. What are examples of community resistance that we can learn from? and 4. How can understanding these struggles create opportunities to advance our work on other issues like housing, jobs, immigration, community development, education, etc?

Eco-Justicia 101: Crisis Ecologica, Efectos sobre las Comunidades de Color y Estrategias para el Futuro

This workshop is also offered in Spanish 1-3 PM

Cobo Hall: DO-02A
LIMITED TO 50 PEOPLE

DS4Si: Social Interventions: An Approach to Creating Social Change
1 PM - 3 PM
Woodward Academy: 1436
with the Design Studio 4 Social Intervention
Social interventions are creative and often public ways to create social change. In this interactive workshop we will engage participants in designing powerful, fun and creative social interventions through: reviewing five diverse social interventions, looking for themes, addressing the S’s of intervention design (scale, structure, systems, symbols, and sensation), discussing the importance of increasing interventionist approaches to change, and inviting participants to be a part of a larger conversation and practice of designing social interventions.

THURSDAY JUNE 24

Movement Generation - Eco-Justice 101: Ecological Crises, Impacts on Communities of Color, and Strategies for the Future
10 AM - 12 PM
WSU Cohn: 224
Communities of color stand to be first and worst impacted by the multiple ecological crises that are developing today. These crises: of water scarcity and pollution, climate change, waste and toxic pollution, food and agriculture, and the loss of biological and cultural diversity, are a result of the same systems that have driven exploitation and oppression in our communities…

Global Justice Ecology Project - Climate Connections: Building the Movement for Social Change

10 AM -12 PM
Woodward Academy: 1436

Co-hosted with: Movement Generation, Indigenous Environmental Network, Women of Color United and others. Climate Change is at once a social and environmental justice issue, an ecological issue, and an issue of economic and political domination. As such, it must be addressed through broad and visionary alliances. To successfully address the climate crisis, we must also identify and address the deep root causes that link it to the myriad other crises we face…

Ruckus Society & Training 4 Change - No More Rallies, No More Marches: Direct Action Strategies for Climate Justice & Community Resiliency
1 PM - 530 PM
Cobo Hall: DO-03B
Tired of seeing the same old mass demonstrations? So are we! This workshop will explore creative innovative action design, to help push past marches and rallies into direct actions that are strategic, effective, and fun!

FRIDAY JUNE 25

Peoples Movement Assembly - Ecological Justice
Co-Convened by: Movement Generation, Ruckus Society, Southwest Workers Union, EJCC, Just Transition Alliance, and many others…
1:00pm - 5:00pm
Cobo Hall: D3-28
This is a BIG PMA that bringing folks together to advance proposals from the grassroots for shared work on climate and ecological justice rooted in an understanding of the need to transform the global systems that determine the ways each of us gets to live, work, and play.

Art is Change: Art & Creative Practice for Cultural and Political Transformation

1 - 3 PM

Cobo Hall: O2-38
“Art Is Change: Art & Creative Practice for Cultural and Political Transformation” will be an interactive/experiential session that introduces the idea of cultural transformation as a framework for political and social justice work. Participants will explore and experiment with the impact of art and creative process, tell stories of the impact in their own work and challenge each other with learning edge questions that are on the cutting edge of cultural organizing including; the tension between cultural equity and cultural transformation and the challenges of embodying our cultural values.

New World from Below Book Party
7-9pm
Spirit of Hope Church - 1519 Martin Luther King Dr, Detroit 48208

Celebrate recent radical publishing with AK Press, PM Press, Autonomedia, Institute of Anarchist Studies, Justseeds Artists’ Cooperative, Microcosm Publishing, Team Colors Collective, and others!

SATURDAY JUNE 26

MASS STREET ACTION for Clean Air, Good Jobs and Justice!

Rally at 9 am in front of Detroit Public Library, 5201 Woodward

Join the People of Detroit on Saturday, June 26 for a Rally, March & Mass Demonstration to End the World’s Biggest Waste Incinerator!

See You In DETROIT!!!!

Audio - smartMeme & Friends on “Shifting the Landscape Towards Justice”

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

Two new Podcasts For your Listening Enjoyment…

Click to LISTEN: Part One :

Moderator: Laine Romero-Alston, Solidago Foundation; with Makani Themba-Nixon, Praxis Project; Doyle Canning, smartMeme; and Kathleen Pequeño, McKenzie River Gathering Foundation.

Click to LISTEN: Part Two :

Moderator: Helen Brunner, Quixote Foundation and Media Democracy Fund
 
Panel; with Karlos Guana Schmeider, Center for Media Justice; Patrick Reinsborough, smartMeme; Damekia Morgan, Community Media Organizing Project and Friends and Families of Louisana’s Incarcerated Children.

(Special thanks to Karlos @ the Center for Media Justice for posting this audio!)

This tele-strategy session series was organized by the Progressive Communicators Network, and brings together grassroots communications practitioners with a commitment to justice issues and funders who support justice and social movement efforts for a rare opportunity to think together about opportunities and imperatives to strengthen communications as a tool for change that will substantively impact U.S. culture, consciousness, and political policies.

This is a time of unprecedented change for grassroots communications practitioners. Factors such as the current economic crisis, rampant media consolidation, emerging new media technology and shift in administration bring unique and urgent challenges and opportunities. Faced with this changing communications landscape, grassroots justice organizations must make smart decisions about how to effectively communicate to advance their program and political work, often with fewer resources and confronted with changes in how media is made and news is communicated.
 
These times demand whole new approaches to change making and communication. It’s no longer enough to win individual victories, we must fundamentally shift our social, cultural and political ecology.

The Center for Media Justice, for example, has put out a call for a comprehensive and transformative approach to justice communications: Truly effective and sustainable movements for racial and economic justice must have the capacity, strategy, and leadership to advance a shared worldview and agenda, watchdog power, elevate strategic stories to a wider audience, increase engaged popular governance, and influence policy to change social conditions.They outline a powerful strategy that tackles race head on, brings the voices of the disenfranchised to the center, transforms public narratives, increases media access, and ultimately changes public consciousness and policy.

Join us to hear about these cutting edge strategies and more communications realities from across the country. We invite you to be part of creating the strategy and infrastructure that will boldly work to transform communications, change work, and the political realities of the 21st century.

REVerb Summer Camp with Progressive Tech Project

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

Enjoy some scenes from the 2009 REVerb Summer Camp with the Progressive Technology Project, somewhere in Minnesota!

This 4 day training was 2 days on framing/story-based strategy w/ smartMeme, and 2 days of fun w/ the Flip Cams and Tweet-decks making mock campaign videos and online campaigns, with Jen Caltrider.

Groups at the camp included SCOPE from Los Angeles, Southwest Organizing Project (SWOP) from Albuquerque, Kentuckians for the Commonwealth, Data Center, POWER from the San Francisco Bay Area, NY City AIDS Housing Network, and TN Immigrant and Refugee Rights Coalition from Nashville.

I took the opportunity to learn more about using final cut pro, an made this video blog about the summer camp!

I had a wonderful time working with all these beautiful, incredible, bold and brilliant organizers - and innovating the story-based strategy curriculum to mesh with viral video production and online campaigning. It was tons of fun, and I learned a ton too.

THANKS to PTP and all who made this amazing training possible!

See also — Pics from the week via Flickr…

www.flickr.com

smartMeme’s RE:Verb Summer Camp with the Progressive Technology Project photoset

10th National Gathering of the Progressive Communicators Network

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009

I was so pleased to attend the 2009 national gathering of the Progressive Communicators Network (PCN), held in Chicago at the end of May. The conversations were rich, the connections were deep, and the insights were exquisite. What an amazing network!

Along with the great discussions (and party!), one of the highlights for me was the workshop on the story-based strategy model. We hadn’t done anything quite like this before. Patrick and I, with support from Anasa Troutman of the Movement Strategy Center, designed this session for this special group of skilled practitioners. It was such a wonderful challenge, and I felt myself growing into the moment. I was so humbled and honored to be in the space and share some of our “edge thinking.” And now you we can share it with you too!

Thanks to Nell Greenberg from Rainforest Action Network (who I recruited on-the-fly to shoot this low-fi video on our Flip Cam), the world can watch the workshop on smartmeme.blip.tv! Its about 45 minutes, and we go into some detail about the strategy model presented in RE:Imagining Change with examples to show each stage in the process….enjoy!

*You can download the slideshow from this presentation (its higher res than this video) at slideshare.net/smartmeme

* You can download the Story-based Strategy Campagin Model “Chart” handout HERE.

Pics from the workshop….

Anasa Troutman from the Movement Strategy Center opens the session on story-based strategy.

smartMeme workshop at the PCN national gathering, Chicago 2009

Doyle giving workshop at PCN national gathering, 2009 in Chicago

What PCN is all about:

PCN exists to strengthen and amplify the power, voices, and vision of grassroots movements that are working for racial, social, economic, and environmental justice. Network members use communication strategy, framing and messaging, and media tools to: 1) enhance the influence of social change movements on public policy and opinion; and 2) realize a world without poverty, racism, and other forms of oppression. The Network is a project of Spirit in Action, a movement-building support organization located in western Massachusetts.

A thousand THANK YOUs to the Progressive Communicators Network for bringing this amazing group together!

MAKE A DONATION TO PCN TODAY!

Podcast: Racial Justice Communications in Obama’s America

Friday, April 17th, 2009

It has taken me far too long to post this, but I feel strongly that smartMeme community will enjoy this important conversation.

On Febuary 25th, the Boston Chapter of the Progressive Communicators Network convened a panel discussion called “Talking About Racial & Economic Justice in Obama’s America.” After some fairly crude sound editing, I managed to upload the recordings of the panelists for your listening enjoyment!

Amaad Rivera [LISTEN] is the director of the racial wealth divide program at United for a Fair Economy, and lead author on their 2009 State of the Dream Report: The Silent Depression. He discusses Racism without Racists, patterns of school segregation in Boston, and building racial justice frameworks.

Tarso Luís Ramos [LISTEN] is the director of research at the right-wing watchdog group Political Research Associates. He discusses the work of Ian F. Haney Lopez’s on “colorblind white dominance,” Eduardo Bonilla-Silva’s work on White Supremacy and Racism in the Post-Civil Rights Era, and the “Color Blind Ideology.”

Color-Blindness:

“views racism at the individual level (e.g. Lines of reasoning such as “I don’t own slaves” or “I have very close black friends” to defend oneself) without looking at the larger social mechanisms in which racism operates.”

Ramos presents a facsinating discussion of Bonilla-Silva’s frames of color blind ideology, and how these play out in affirmative action fights: Minimization (“Yes, there is some racism but its no big deal”); Cultural Failings (“Mexicans have too many babies; Blacks don’t value education,” etc.); Naturalization (“Its natural for people to flock together. Its not segregation.”); and Meritocracy (“Its unfair for government to advance one race over another; treaty rights/civil rights are special rights.”)

Ramos says that these four frames reinforce each other and hold racism in place, and he points to the work of the Center for Social Inclusion to suggest that audiences need an alternative frame of “Structural Racism” to buck the colorblind mythology.

Doyle Canning [LISTEN] (that’s me), discusses some of the stories in the popular culture on racism and “post racism,” and how story-based strategies can work to challenge some of the underlying assumptions of white supremacy in the dominant culture.

The most potent meme of the moment was the “Nation of Cowards” from Eric Holder’s speech on systemic racism.

I strongly recommend watching this amazing roundtable on the topic on Laura Flander’s GRITtv:

Manning Marable’s comments (10 minutes into the video) are particularly powerful in terms of thinking about the power of narrative and history. He speaks about the stories we carry in our head as we’re walking through the world depending on our history: Marable sees lower Manhattan as a slave trading port, while others (whites) see Wall Street’s glittering façade.

This gets to the heart of the internalization of racism. The Peoples’ Institute for Survival and Beyond discusses the interconnected principles of learning from history and addressing the inter-generational processes of internalized racial superiority and inferiority.

I believe that story-based strategies can help us build movements for racial justice, but it really is about movement building. If only it were as easy as coming up with a pat sound-byte to address these deep seeded cultural currents! It still takes struggle, as it always has.

One piece of work I want to point to specifically is work on unmasking and undoing White Privilege, such as the first annual White Privilege Awareness Week!

Also, in terms of racial justice communications specifically, check out the guide “Talking The Walk,” edited by Hunter Cutting and Makani Themba-Nixon (download the toolkit!); and the Center for Media Justice toolkit, Communicate Justice 101. See also: A Three-Ring Circus On Race This Week by Paul Rosenburg.

And one more thing…

Maureen Dowd wrote in her NY Times OP-Ed on Holder’s speech,

“In the middle of all the Heimlich maneuvers required now — for the economy, Iran, Pakistan, Afghanistan, health care, the environment and education — we don’t need a Jackson/Sharpton-style lecture on race. Barack Obama’s election was supposed to get us past that.”

My observation is that this is the line of reasoning often used in white-led liberal organizations (“We’ve got a crisis and so much work to do…we can’t deal with this now…and besides, we have some people of color involved.”) about why we can’t talk honestly about racism and work to address racism within our movements…Just a thought.

Be the Media in Boston!

Wednesday, November 26th, 2008

Join smartMeme December 3rd at Third Sector New England in Boston for the Be the Media! Mini-Conference, and our workshop, “Narrative & Power: Story-based Strategies for Social Change.”

From bethemediaevent.org :

The annual Be the Media! Mini-Conference helps participants understand the link between strategic communications and organizing strategies as well as learn essential communications tools and techniques.

The theme of the third annual Be the Media! Mini-Conference is: Challenges and Opportunities in the Age of New Media for Grassroots Organizations.

Communications and media work are powerful tools for organizers and non-profits working on community and social issues, but they can also present challenges, particularly for under-resourced groups. In recent years, the development of new media tools such as social networking sites, blogs with multi-media content, YouTube, and cell phones as mass communication devices have both given groups more options and raised questions about where to focus already limited staff and volunteer time. At this year’s conference, we will explore not only how to implement these tools, but identify what are their best and most impactful uses for grassroots organizations.

The conference is designed to serve change makers at levels of communication experience including those who are doing communications work as part of their current positions, such as organizers, executive directors, or policy advocates.

Sponsored by: Progressive Communicators Network, Third Sector New England and Project Think Different
Co-sponsored by: Boston Women’s Fund, Resist, and Press Pass TV.

Oct 1 with Progressive Communicators Network (Boston)

Thursday, September 25th, 2008

Join me and the Progressive Communicators Network in Boston for:

Winning the Battle of the Story PART II ~ Working with the battle of the story tool

Wednesday, October 1, 2008
6:00 pm - 7:30 pm
at United for a Fair Economy
29 Winter St., Boston, 2nd Floor
(Light Refreshment will be served)

RSVP to Tom Louie! Please let us know what kind of social change work you do, as we will be applying the tool to your campaigns!

This workshop is a follow-up to the July PCN-Boston workshop on the Battle of the Story, but you do not need to have attended that one to attend this one!

The Progressive Communicators Network-Boston/New England is the regional chapter of the national Progressive Communicators Network (PCN). PCN exists to strengthen and amplify the power, voices, and vision of grassroots movements that are working for social, economic, and environmental justice. Our members use communication strategy, framing and messaging, and media tools to: 1) enhance the influence of social change movements on public policy and opinion, and 2) realize a world without poverty, racism, and other forms of oppression. The Network is a project of Spirit in Action, a movement-building support organization located in western Massachusetts.

Progressive Communicators Network(ing)

Friday, August 1st, 2008

Last week I had the pleasure of meeting with members of the Boston-area Progressive Communicators Network. They host monthly learning events and invited me to speak about smartMeme’s approach to messaging and framing.

Based in western Massachusetts, PCN is a national network of organizers/communicators who:

“strengthen and amplify the power, voices, and vision of grassroots movements that are working for racial, social, economic, and environmental justice.”

PCN offers tools, networking, and an annual member convening to connect progressive communicators in order to enhance collaboration and advance the field of strategic communications. PCN also has active local groups, including one here in Boston.

About a dozen people came by to enjoy some burritos and conversation - and hailed from some amazing groups like the Student Immigrant Movement, United for a Fair Economy, Political Research Associates, Mass English Plus and the Unitarian Universalist Service Committee. It was inspiring to hear of the great social justice work that folks in the Boston area are doing, and have the opportunity to introduce myself (and smartMeme) to this community.

You can check out the slideshow I gave here (FYI some of the colors got tweaked in the slide-spacing process…)

After the slideshow we had the opportunity to talk, and the discussion was a rich reflection on the role of people’s history in story-based strategy. Often what we are facing is not lack of a story, but a ‘forgetting’ of history that is based in racism. As the antiracism principles of the Peoples’ Institute For Survival and Beyond remind us:

“History is a tool for effective organizing. Understanding the lessons of history frees us to create a more humane future.”

So many of the barriers that racial justice and social change communicators face are deeply related to an erasure of histories, and a dominant US media and school curriculum that often ignores (or is ignorant to) the centuries of struggle for social justice.

When we are communicating across race and class and waging the fight for justice, we are often struggling not just to reframe what’s happening in the present, but also name and reclaim what has happened in the past.

As any pop-psychologist will tell you, you can’t move forward into a better future without examining and understanding your story of your past - and the United States certainly has not reckoned with its history of genocide, slavery, conquest, and imperial interventions…

A related topic of discussion for the group was the story of the US civil rights movement, and that like many stories - it has become a “great man” story. While Dr Martin Luther King was undoubtedly an important leader, there were also countless individuals, particularly women (like Fannie Lou Hamer, Ella Baker, and many others) who were the muscle of the movement. (BTW I’ve Got the Light Of Freedom is an excellent peoples’ history of the Mississippi Freedom Struggle).

Some of the questions I was left with (as a social studies teacher by training and a smartMeme-er by trade):

As a diverse country, if we don’t know each others’ (and often our own) histories, how do we envision a shared future?

When/How must our movements wage the battle of the story over the past in order to foreshadow our story of the future?

Pop-culture narratives are celebrity-focused, but movements are powered by countless everyday people, so how do we both honor our leaders and hype all of the everyday heroes of our stories?

Thanks to PCN for the opportunity to offer our ideas, and have a provocative conversation. Thanks also to UFE for hosting!

*We hope to continue the conversation with another PCN learning event in the fall focused on using the battle of the story tool in practice. Be in touch if you’d like to attend!