Tamara Winfrey Harris is a writer whose work has appeared in the Chicago Sun-Times, In These Times, and Ms. and Bitch magazines and online at the American Prospect, Salon, the Guardian, Newsweek/Daily Beast, xoJane, the Huffington Post, Psychology Today, Clutch magazine, and Change.org. She has been called to address women's issues in major media outlets, such as NPR's Weekend Edition. The Sisters Are Alright is Foreword Reviews' 2015 INDIEFAB Book Awards in Women's Studies.
Praise for the second edition:
“The Sisters Are Alright is a brilliant example of Tamara Winfrey
Harris’s unique alchemy: bold writing and astute cultural analysis
with Black women unapologetically centered. Here is the Black
woman’s experience rendered with grace, beauty, and righteous
anger. Read this and know us more fully.”
—Deesha Philyaw, author of The Secret Lives of Church Ladies
“While it is fashionable to say ‘Believe Black women,’ for those
who mean it, believe Tamara Winfrey Harris. She speaks for us, and
when she says ‘the sisters are alright,’ she has our proxy and puts
respect on our names. She writes in the tradition of those Black
women whose job it is to hold the sacred spaces of our humanity,
telling the world who we are not just politically, as the women who
save democracy or flip Georgia, but who we are to ourselves and to
each other. Who we are interpersonally, intellectually,
spiritually, sexually. How we move our bodies and run through our
own minds and how we’ve had to walk, sometimes dance, sometimes
trip through the world. Toni Morrison once wrote that the Black
woman ‘may very well have invented herself,’ and chapter by
chapter, with historical complexity and contemporary context,
Tamara Winfrey Harris tells you just how all that self-invention
gets done and all the ways it remains a beautiful, elaborate
ongoing project.”
—Lonnae O’Neal, journalist and Senior Writer, ESPN’s The
Undefeated
“No one should have to tell Black women that nothing is wrong with
them. But thank God that Tamara Winfrey Harris does. And The
Sisters Are Alright: Changing the Broken Narrative of Black Women
in America does more than change the narrative. It gives that
mythical, false, diminished narrative the funeral it
deserves--powerful, decisive, heartbreaking, and final.”
—Rochelle Riley, author of The Burden and coauthor of That They
Lived
“Black women deserve everything, but it is not often that we get
even a portion of what is owed to us. In the second edition of The
Sisters Are Alright, using historical references and current events
sewn into fabric made up of the diverse voices of Black women,
Tamara Winfrey Harris again proves that she writes for us. Her work
encompasses the fullness of the Black woman experience. In this
book, Black women will find our challenges, our triumphs, and our
Black girl joy. This book is truly the gift we always needed but
never knew we would get.”
—Dr. Tyffani Monford Dent, psychologist and author of Black Girl
and You Got This!
“Society continues to deride and disrespect Black women. Tamara
Winfrey Harris not only rejects that narrative; she rewrites it. In
Sisters, Tamara brings to life the change she wants to see—not just
for herself but for all Black women.
—Dr. Carolyn Strong, educator and author of Black Girl Blues
Praise for the first edition:
“This energetic, passionate, and progressive mission statement
illuminates old stereotypes that continue to dog black women today.
Winfrey-Harris amplifies the voices of African-American women
speaking for themselves, and the results are powerful, relevant,
and affirming.”
-Publishers Weekly
“Harris challenges age-old constructions of black womanhood with
real-life accounts from black mothers, daughters, aunties, and
girlfriends who reject the popular narrative of brokenness.”
-Jason Parham, Gawker
“Using a combination of anecdotal evidence, historical research,
and well-documented facts and studies, Harris has compiled an
engaging and informative treatise on black womanhood in
America.”
-Lori L. Tharps, The Washington Post
“The Sisters Are Alright enters a space where we’re publicly
contemplating race — and blackness in particular — quite a bit
lately. That public contemplation has been fraught with a mixture
of frustration, grief and anger at the way black people are treated
and the way black bodies are viewed in the United States.”
-Soraya Nadia McDonald, The Washington Post
“The Sisters are Alright: Changing the Broken Narrative for Black
Women in America challenges stereotypical portrayals of black women
and highlights the need for nuanced, complex characters.
- Ariel Cheung, USA Today
With its insightful blend of personal narrative, cultural critique
and reflective interview, your book follows in the critical and
literary footsteps of such feminist/womanist writers as Michele
Wallace, Patricia Hill Collins and bell hooks. Similar to
these authors, you unpack the often damaging effect the myth of the
self-sacrificing black superwoman has on black women’s mental
health and wellness.”
-Sikivu Hutchinson, The Feminist Wire
“One of the things I loved about [this] book was how it emphasized
how self-love could help radically shift some of these
perspectives. [This] book really tackles specific stereotypes that
shape the way American culture perceives black women.”
-Arielle Bernstein, Rumpus
“Through explorations of marriage, motherhood, health, sexuality,
beauty and more, Tamara Winfrey Harris counters warped prejudices
by going far beyond the trope of Black women portrayed in American
media. The Sisters Are Alright exposes anti–Black-woman propaganda
and shows the truth of what it’s like to be a Black woman in
America, a counter-narrative to the distorted depictions of
themselves Black women are so often subject to.”
-Amani Ariel, Blavity
“The book pairs Harris' impeccable writing with stories of Black
women and how they have been shaped by the stereotypes that are
dictating how we view those around us.”
-Emily Taylor, NUVO
“The Sisters are Alright: Changing the Broken Narrative of Black
Women in America, Winfrey Harris’ first book, tackles long-standing
stereotypes and misconceptions steeped in racism and misogyny
surrounding Black women’s sexuality, beauty, health and more.
Included are interviews she conducted with hundreds of Black women
of different ages and backgrounds.”
-Ebony Chappel, Indianapolis Recorder
“[Winfrey Harris] speaks to real Black women, relaying the fact we
are not as broken as society paints us to be. After all, we are the
fastest growing group of entrepreneurs in America, we have to be
doing something right.”
-Chelcee Johns, Madame Noir
“The Sisters Are Alright invites Black women, and those who love
and care about Black women to reject this age-old stereotype in
favor of a more expansive and progressive notion of women’s
sexuality.”
-Susana Morris, About News
“Winfrey Harris’ book comes with us, both the celebrities and the
sistahgurl down the street, letting us speak our own lives to power
in this moment on our own terms.”
-Andrea Plaid, Feminist Wire
“Winfrey-Harris uses her distinctive voice to explore how Black
women are thriving despite the odds stacked against us. She
explores everything from marriage to sexuality in a way that will
definitely cause affirmative head nods as reading.”
-Evette Dionne, Clutch Mag
“It’s a book that reminds me that I’m not alone, and that I’m not
crazy. All those moments I felt insecure or inadequate as a young
adult — a young adult without many Black girlfriends until I became
a young adult — weren’t simply psychosomatic. By utilizing the
anecdotes of other Black women, Winfrey Harris inspired me to
wonder how my story might resonate with others, just as theirs
resonate with me.”
-Akirah Robinson, 1839 Mag
“Tami Winfrey Harris provides some answers from both a historical
and contemporary perspective. She argues that because of a
pervasive public opinion about black women, assaults against them
are often not perceived as newsworthy.
Winfrey Harris’s book shows us that public representations of black
women can be beneficial when the women involved are in
control.”
-Laina Dawes, Hazlitt
“This book is a gift. With just the right mix of sister wit,
statistical information, and a few well-timed rhetorical side-eyes,
The Sisters Are Alright rushes in to save black women from the
stereotypes that threaten to dull our shine.”
—Brittney Cooper, PhD, Assistant Professor of Women’s and Gender
Studies and Africana Studies, Rutgers University
“Winfrey Harris [digs] into the project of remaking representations
of black women as they truly are—joyfully diverse, indelibly
complex, and powerful architects of their own narratives."
—Andi Zeisler, cofounder and Editorial/Creative Director, Bitch
Media
“Winfrey Harris sets the record straight. This is a love letter to
all the sisters—beautifully human and gorgeously flawed. Reading
this book I felt seen, heard, and deeply understood. This is
self-care between two covers.”
—Tayari Jones, author of Silver Sparrow
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