Brit Bennett on Ta-Nehisi Coates

Black female bodies are vulnerable, too, in the presence of police, in our communities, and even in our own homes. Black women are disproportionately likely to be victims of violent crimes, intimate-partner violence, and sexual assault. But while we are rightly outraged by the vulnerability of black male bodies, we rarely register the ways in which black women are vulnerable. Whose vulnerability is horrifying and haunting, worthy of marching and protest? Whose is natural and inevitable? Even as a woman, I notice this contradiction in myself. I noticed it the night Trayvon Martin’s killer walked free, when I felt the overwhelming urge to comfort my friend because he should not feel vulnerable. He should be the one to walk through deserted parks late at night, even if I never could because I’m aware of all the things that men — black or white, police or civilian — might do to my body. How easily I accepted this as the natural order of things. How easily I learned all the ways my body could never be free.

For the New Yorker: Brit Bennett reviews the new Ta-Nehisi Coates book. Read it now.

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