This Ms. Magazine blogpost by Regina Davis Moss, PhD, MPH, MCHES , Associate Executive Director of #PublicHealth policy with the American Public Health Association , reminded me why I'm always astonished when some people question the need for a #BlackHistoryMonth . I am 57 years old, yet I never knew until about a few hours ago that the iconic DC Comics Superhero Wonder Woman had a black twin sister named Nubia! Reading Davis Moss's outline of her amazing back story, I recalled an exhibit at the Smithsonian Institution 's National Museum of African American History and Culture that highlights all the insidious ways African Americans have been depicted in advertising and popular culture, in order to perpetuate the belief that we are stupid, lazy and/or inherently criminal or hyper-sexual. When you control the narrative and the visuals, you maintain the upper hand,. That's what has occurred during 400 years of African presence in America. So when milestones like the movie "Hidden Figures" and "Black Panther"--and Wonder Woman's long lost sister Nubia--occur, it's not mere entertainment. It's restoring our rightful role in American and world history and popular culture. #BlackHistoryMonth2019
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#BlackHistoryMonth2019