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Supremely Tiny Acts: A Memoir Of A Day (21St Century Essays) (Volume 1),Used
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Winner (Bronze, Autobiography & Memoir), 2021 Foreword Indies AwardsI think we have to get to the real, to catch the facts we have, to hold on to what we see. . . .in this time where lies are currency, Sonya Huber writes in her booklength essay Supremely Tiny Acts: A Memoir of a Day. On the theory that naming the truths of quotidian experience can counter the dangerous power of lies, she carefully recounts two anxietyfueled days one fall. On the first, she is arrested as part of a climate protest in Times Square. On the other, she must make it to her court appearance while also finding time to take her son to get his learner's permit. Paying equal attention to minor details, passing thoughts, and larger political concerns around activism and parenting in the Trumpera United States, Huber asks: How can one simultaneously be a good mother, a good worker, and a good citizen? As she reflects on the meaning of protest and on whiteness and other forms of privilege within political activism, Huber offers a wry, selfaware, and stirring testament to the everyday as a seedbed for meaningful change.
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