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GNBC invites you to an immersive historical storytelling experience wrC style. Each season you can pick from a mix of graphic novels, podcasts, documentaries, and short videos to bring unforgettable stories, events and people to life.  Anyone can participate! You choose your pace, wRC offers gentle guidance and questions to help process. For GNBC Members, After 6-8 weeks, we gather to reflect, share, and get ready for the next season of learning.

Season I: Resistance is never Black & White

Plant: July 7 

Harvest: August 22

The enigma of Walter F. White & being Hidden in Plain Sight

The inaugural season of GNBC spotlights Walter F. White, a light-skinned Black man and NAACP investigator who passed as white to infiltrate white supremacist spaces and expose racial violence from within. His story challenges everything we think we know about race, power, and identity in America.

 

To explore his legacy, the illustrated offering is Incognegro by Mat Johnson. A suspenseful graphic novel inspired by real-life tactics Walter used told through a  gripping, gritty, and eerily relevant story.

Share your thoughts!

As you make new discoveries or reshape old ones, WRC wants to hear from you! Whether it’s a question, a realization, or a “wait-what?” moment, your insight adds to the collective experience. share your thoughts using the Season One Reflection Form below!

White Lies: The Double Life of Walter F. White & America's Darkest Secret

By A.J. Baime

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"Walter F. White led two lives: one as a leader of the Harlem Renaissance and the NAACP in the early twentieth century; the other as a white newspaperman who covered lynching crimes in the Deep South at the blazing height of racial violence. Born mixed race and with very fair skin and straight hair, White was able to “pass” for white. He leveraged this ambiguity as a reporter, bringing to light the darkest crimes in America and helping to plant the seeds of the civil rights movement.

White’s risky career led him to lead a double life. He was simultaneously a second-class citizen subject to Jim Crow laws at home and a widely respected professional with full access to the white world at work. His life was fraught with internal and external conflict—much like the story of race in America. Starting out as an obscure activist, White ultimately became Black America’s most prominent leader, during his time. A character study of White’s life and career with all these complexities has never been rendered, until now."

Incognegro: A Graphic Mystery

by Mat Johnson, Warren Pleece 

"In the early 20th Century, when lynchings were commonplace throughout the American South, a few courageous reporters from the North risked their lives to expose these atrocities. They were African-American men who, due to their light skin color, could "pass" among the white folks. They called this dangerous assignment going "incognegro." Zane Pinchback, a reporter for the New York-based New Holland Herald, is sent to investigate the arrest of his own brother, charged with the brutal murder of a white woman in Mississippi. With a lynch mob already swarming, Zane must stay "incognegro" long enough to uncover the truth behind the murder in order to save his brother — and himself. Suspenseful, unsettling and relevant, Incognegro is a tense graphic novel of shifting identities, forbidden passions, and secrets that run far deeper than skin color."

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Forgotten Hero: Walter White & the NAACP

Watch here or at the link below

"While many consider the birth of the civil rights movement to be 1955, when Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat on an Alabama bus, the stage had been set decades before by activists of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Some of the NAACP leaders are familiar, including W.E.B. Du Bois and Thurgood Marshall, but Walter White, head of the NAACP from 1929 to 1955, has been all but forgotten. With his blond hair and blue eyes, Walter White looked white; he described himself as “an enigma, a Black man occupying a white body.”  Like virtually all light-skinned African Americans of his day, White was descended from enslaved Black women and powerful white men. But he was Black — by law, identity, and conviction and spent his entire life fighting for Black civil rights.  Forgotten Hero: Walter White and the NAACP traces the life of this neglected civil rights hero and seeks to explain his disappearance from our history."

Season I thoughts

As you move through the material,  how might you benefit from your "proximity to power" or how are you at a disadvantage?

Walter F. White chose to pass not for safety but to confront danger. What does that say about identity as strategy? Does it change how you see identity?

Thinking about how you move through the world, what kind of risks would you have to take to tell the truth? How do those risks change with different enviroments?

Do you have something else you want to share?

GNBC Member Session: August 22

Feel free to come back and submit again!

Thanks for sharing!

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