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

zakia henderson-brown

Senior Editor | The New Press
Pronouns: she/her
zakia henderson-brown is a senior editor at The New Press, where she has worked for 12 years. Her titles include Pulitzer Prize finalist In a Day’s Work by Bernice Yeung, Inventing Latinos by Laura Gomez, Prison By Any Other Name by Maya Schenwar and Victoria Law, No More Police by Mariame Kaba and Andrea Ritchie, Waste by Catherine Flowers, and others. zakia was selected as a finalist for the 2021 Publishers Weekly Star to Watch program and lives in her native Brooklyn.

Presentations from Facing Race 2024

Books Can Change the World!: Publishing for a More Just World, 101

As most organizers and advocates know, books such as Michelle Alexander’s The New Jim Crow can play a major role in changing the national discussion about urgent social issues. A well-written book that makes a compelling argument can be an essential tool to inject transformative ideas into the popular discourse. At The New Press, we’ve found that movement leaders can be best positioned to share a unique vision for a just future.

The New Press’s senior editors will illustrate how a book can help leverage change. Participants will gain practical knowledge about how to move through the stages of book publishing, including: developing a book concept; preparing a cogent, well-informed proposal; drafting a manuscript; publicizing the book; and collaborating with organizations to amplify the book’s impact.

We will share relevant resources, key examples, and case studies, and participants will have an opportunity to practice in small groups and have their questions answered by veteran editors. The New Press is uniquely positioned as a non-profit publisher in the public interest to seek out authors committed to social change, and to develop works of non-fiction that set forth new, paradigm-shifting ideas.

Our catalog includes works from Noam Chomsky and Lisa Delpit, and more recent contributions to conversations in criminal justice and education reform, including Mariame Kaba and Andrea Ritchie’s No More Police: A Case for Abolition and Monique Couvson’s Pushout: The Criminalization of Black Girls in Schools.

Speakers: zakia henderson-brown, Ben Woodward

Presentations from Facing Race 2016

Books Can Change the World!: Publishing for Social Justice 101

As we’ve witnessed with The New Jim Crow, books can play a major role in changing the national discussion about urgent social issues. A well-written book that makes a well-researched argument or uses a unique narrative thread to illustrate the need for reform can be an essential tool to inject transformative ideas into the popular discourse. At The New Press, we’ve found that movement leaders can be best positioned to share a unique vision for change. Workshop leaders will illustrate how a book can help leverage change. Participants will gain practical knowledge about how to move through the stages of book publishing, including: developing a book concept; preparing a cogent, well-informed proposal; strategies for researching; drafting a manuscript (e.g. structuring an argument; writing in a clear and compelling way that integrates storytelling); publicizing the book; and collaborating with organizations to amplify the book’s impact. We will share relevant resources, key examples, and case studies. The New Press is uniquely positioned as a non-profit publisher in the public interest to seek out authors committed to social change, and to develop works of non-fiction that set forth new, paradigm-shifting ideas. Our catalog includes works from Studs Terkel and Noam Chomsky, and more recent contributions to conversations in criminal and economic justice, and education reform, including Michelle Alexander’s The New Jim Crow; Lisa Delpit’s Other People’s Children; and Ai-jen Poo’s The Age of Dignity.

Speakers: zakia henderson-brown, Benjamin Woodward