Site icon The Philadelphia Citizen

Lessons in Voting at Michael Eric Dyson Book Launch

Author Michael Eric Dyson poses with students after the event.

Author Michael Eric Dyson poses with students after the event.

A sure sign of a Philadelphia Citizen event: a strong showing of smart, civically engaged guests. A sure sign that you’re at a Philly event: a guy selling t-shirts outside the venue. Tuesday night’s civic fair and book launch at the Fitler Club was, therefore, both classic Philadelphia Citizen and classic Philly.

The event featured:

Those get-out-the-vote groups included PA Youth Vote, a Philly-founded group to encourage young voters to register and vote; the deep canvassing org Changing the Conversation Together; and Committee of 70, a good government advocacy group that encourages and trains poll watchers. The Citizen also offered guests the chance to write postcards to Mayor Parker, post wishes for Philadelphia and Pennsylvania, and get info on how to talk about voting with their friends.

“The greatest trick of white supremacy is making you believe you aint got nothing to vote for.” — Michael Eric Dyson

Evening WURD host James Peterson interviewed Dyson and Favreau live on the radio about their new book, Represent: The Unfinished Fight for the Vote, which Dyson described as “a historical genealogy of the evolution and development of the fight for the vote … As the book says, it’s an ongoing fight.”

Represent: The Unfinished Fight for the Vote

As such, they dug into the political disinformation (including around voter fraud), the possibility of disenfranchisement (Philadelphia’s own Robert Purvis offers cautionary context), voter intimidation (including the terror of the 1876 election), the importance of teaching youth the brutal truth about Americans who died for the right to vote, the need to eliminate the electoral college, the dangerous history behind voter apathy and … Taylor Swift.

“The greatest trick of white supremacy is making you believe you aint got nothing to vote for,” said Dyson, “Voting is like an on-off switch: If you don’t use the vote, other peoples’ voices get amplified … One way or another, you’re being counted.”

Before the authors took the stage, Peterson interviewed Penn Professor Lia Howard and three of her students at the Political Empathy Lab about their summer travels across Pennsylvania to “strengthen their empathy muscles” by, Howard said, “listening and connecting — deeply listening — to people with whom we don’t agree.”

Learn more about the book, the Political Empathy Lab — and Dyson’s and Favreau’s prescriptions for getting more Americans to vote — below.

 

Penn researcher Lynn Larabi (left) explains the Political Empathy Lab project to Princeton students.

 

Representatives from Committee of 70.

 

Eliza Griswold’s students from Princeton University at the civics fair.

 

A guest posts a wish for Philadelphia at the civic engagement fair.

 

Broadcasting live: Evening WURD Radio host James Peterson.

 

Larry Platt (left) and Roxanne Patel Shepelavy introduce members of the University of Pennsylvania’s Political Empathy Lab.

 

Members of Penn’s Political Empathy Lab, left to right: Lynn Larabi, Dr. Lia Howard and James Peterson.

 

Left to right: Autumn Cortright, Ashley Alexander, Lynn Larabi, Dr. Lia Howard and WURD host James Peterson.

 

Michael Eric Dyson.

 

Left to right: Authors Michael Eric Dyson and Marc Favreau, with James Peterson.

 

Left to right: Larry Platt, Michael Eric Dyson, Roxanne Patel Shepelavy, Marc Favreau and James Peterson.

 

MORE CITIZEN EVENTS

Exit mobile version