The Substance of Truth

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From the book: “At risk of appearing alarmist, it’s easy to ignore all the warning signs hanging around us that suggest the clock is ticking fast—real fast!—and that time left for due action is short. But if life for the next generation should contain some semblance of sanity—where life itself means more than shopping malls and commodities, where Power stands accountable to the demands of communities—all fear of coming across hyperbolic would have to give way to the realities staring us down. The risk also extends to coming across Pollyannaish, as though all the impurities and iniquities holding hostage society can be cured with essays or lectures.
But we cannot afford to let this moment slip by unattended, unengaged. The problems number endless—and so do the possibilities. And at no other moment has a generation been more fortunate, with the ease of technology, to make miracles happen amidst frightening circumstances. At no other moment has the clarion call blared this clearly and loudly.”

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Teachers
The Good, the Bad, the Great
Pages: 1–8
Failing Grade
Unlearning the Privatization, Medicalization, and Militarization of Schooling
Pages: 17–25
Checkmate
Black Children as Metaphor for a Failed Education System
Pages: 27–31
Distant Relatives
Bridging the Gap Between Critical Pedagogy and Culturally Appropriate Pedagogy
Pages: 33–39
Education as Etch-A-Sketch
Beyond Books and Brains
Pages: 41–44
Children in a Hostile World
When Justice Doesn’t Roll Down
Pages: 55–60
Victims and Vultures
Sarah Kruzan, Injustice, and the Trials of Today
Pages: 61–65
In Love with a Stripper
Young Girls as Preys in a Predator Society
Pages: 67–71
Double Major
Student Loan Reform and the Struggle for a Democratic Academy
Pages: 81–85
Words as Weapons
Communication in an Age of Illiteracy
Pages: 87–95
Black Bodies Swinging
Racialized Representations in the Post-Racial (?!) Era
Pages: 97–101
Watch What You’re Watching
Mass Media, Television, and the Making of Zombies
Pages: 103–110
Hip-Hop
Then, Today, Tomorrow
Pages: 117–123
When Political Ideology Morphs Into Spiritual Death
Social Darwinism in Dark Times
Pages: 133–140
“This is Working Very Well for Them”
Katrina and the Aftermath of Apathy
Pages: 147–153
Social Networking
Privacy, Illiteracy, and the Future of Democracy
Pages: 155–162
Prophets of Baal
Religious Fanaticism, Christianity Inc., and the Recall of Reconciliation
Pages: 163–169
Hope and (Some) Change
Barack Obama and the Audacity of Government
Pages: 171–180
Age of Poverty
Consumerism, Privatization, and the Cheapening of Life
Pages: 181–189
The Substance of Truth
Uncovering the Present, Past, and Future of Society
Pages: 191–202
Tolu Olorunda is a cultural critic whose work has regularly appeared on AlterNet, Black Commentator, CounterPunch, Truthout, and several other publications including ColorLines magazine, The Nation magazine, and Wiretap magazine. His book, The Substance of Truth, takes a frank look into what has become of a society that touts grand and lofty ideals which it often fails to fulfill.
With essays addressing issues as broad as the education system, 21st century media culture, Hip-Hop culture, youth culture, neoliberalism, and moral poverty, Olorunda argues the days ahead would darken in promise if rigorous action isn’t soon applied to rectify the way people think, how they respond to their surroundings, and the decisions they take to make the world better than it stands today. This struggle, he insists, could define whether or not a livable future would exist for the most vulnerable of all—children, whose plights are increasingly cast aside and ignored.
Educational Researchers and their students
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