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The Ferguson Report: An Erasure
The Ferguson Report: An Erasure | Nicole Sealey
3 posts | 2 read | 1 to read
A NEW YORKER BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR • A meditation on our times, cast through a reconsideration of the Justice Department's investigation of the Ferguson Police Department In August 2014, Michael Brown—a young, unarmed Black man—was shot to death by a police officer in Ferguson, Missouri. What followed was a period of protests and turmoil, culminating in an extensive report that was filed by the Department of Justice detailing biased policing and court practices in the city. It is a document that exposes the racist policies and procedures that have become commonplace—from disproportionate arrest rates, to flagrant violence directed at the Black community. It is a report that remains as disheartening as it is damning. Now, award-winning poet Nicole Sealey revisits the investigation in a book that redacts the report, an act of erasure that reimagines the original text as it strips it away. While the full document is visible in the background—weighing heavily on the language Sealey has preserved—it gives shape and disturbing context to what remains. Illuminating what it means to live in this frightening age, and what it means to bear witness, The Ferguson Report: An Erasure is an engrossing meditation on one of the most important texts of our time.
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BC_Dittemore
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(1/2) This is a truly important contribution to modern culture. To think how much painstaking time must have gone into this—kudos to Nicole Sealey; what a treasure!

What strikes me is how easily I could have missed this. Had it not been for my interest in one of her poems (‘a violence‘ which I shared recently) this would have gone completely under my radar.

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BC_Dittemore
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(2/2)It‘s not even the quality of the poems (all fantastic btw), but because looking at the redacted report behind the poems, one detailing racial bias, misogyny, violence, and letting those words fade to reveal what Sealey has done is truly an experience.

So next time you‘re at a library or bookstore see if this is in stock. Hold it, look at the words, flip the pages and tell me there‘s not some sort of discernible power in a work like this.

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sakeriver
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