Facing Race: A National Conference in St. Louis, MO — November 20-22, 2024

Yanique Redwood

Author |
Pronouns: she/her
Yanique is the author of White Women Cry and Call Me Angry: A Black Woman’s Memoir on Racism in Philanthropy (2023), a deeply vulnerable exploration of racism, trauma, and the power of pleasure to fuel personal and institutional transformation. She is an expert on racial equity and racial justice and has spent her career writing and speaking on these topics for nonprofit and philanthropic audiences to inform their strategies, grantmaking, and praxis. She released her second book with her partner Ronnie Galvin in 2024. The title is We Quit America: Our Exit from a Country Designed to Kill Black People.

Facebook: Page/Profile
Instagram: @whitewomencry
LinkedIn: Profile

Presentations from Facing Race 2024

If You Are Silent About Your Pain: Healing Wounds, Shaping Narratives, and Building Power

“White Women Cry and Call Me Angry” is neither a call out of white women nor a call in. It is about the author’s ability to name what happened to her during the decade she spent fighting for racial justice in the DC philanthropic sector. It is about her ability to find community with others who have had similar experiences, regardless of where they work. It is another step toward healing.

This 90-minute session will explore racism in the workplace—interpersonal, institutional, and structural. We will also do a deep dive on three of the book’s most important themes—weathering, mental health, and pleasure. Weathering describes the accelerated aging of Black women’s bodies due to racism related stress. Mental health implications of that stress will also be discussed as well. Audre Lorde’s “Uses of the Erotic” as a way to undergird our discussion of the theme of pleasure.

In the second half of the conversation, we will discuss the writing and self-publishing journey; the role of Black women in the author’s decision to publish; and the need for more stories by Black women and other women of color. We will close by talking about the response to the book; how books influence narratives and can lead to spaces for collective discernment and healing; and what’s next for the author as a facilitator of healing spaces. The author will share a short sizzle reel of the film adaptation of the book, which is currently in production.

Speakers: Yanique Redwood, Rachael DeCruz