What We Learn Vignettes of Belonging in The Color of Her Passport Through the experiences of five individuals, The Color of Her Passport provides a glimpse into the questions of identity and belonging that those caught in Japan and Korea's bitter politics must struggle with today.
What We Learn Leaving Leadership Behind: Media's New Role in Movement-Making Civil Rights activist Bernard Lafayette, Jr. suggests that a movement needs a leader to act as its spokesperson. But Sasha Constanza-Chock's research on transmedia organizing shows us that such leaders may not be as essential to a movement's growth as they once were.
What We Learn Kōtoku Shūsui and Angela Davis Discuss Revolution From prison in 1910 and 1973 respectively, Japanese anarchist Kotoku Shusui and Black scholar-activist Angela Davis contemplate why the question of violence in revolution is the wrong one.
What We Learn The Myth of Monoethnicity in Multiethnic Japan As John Lie's "Multiethnic Japan" explores the pervasiveness of Japan's perceived monoethnicity, he reminds us of the urgent need to shed this bias from our vocabulary and amplify minority voices.
What We Learn Shishunki: How We Let Our Children Down From the perspective of an elementary school boy, director Koki Okakura's award-winning short film "Shishunki" explores how our education system and society at large teach us to ostracize those who are different.
What We Learn All or None: Lessons from A New Jim Crow After proving that mass incarceration is another iteration of America's racial caste system, Michelle Alexander argues that only a major social movement that includes "everyone" can dismantle it for good.