Calling In (Unabridged)
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4.6 • 9 Ratings
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- $19.99
Publisher Description
From a pioneering Black feminist and MacArthur “Genius” Fellow, this urgent and exhilarating memoir-manifesto-handbook provides bold, practical new ways to transform conflicts into connections, even with those we’re tempted to walk away from.
In 1979, Loretta Ross was a single mother in Washington who’d had to drop out of Howard University. She was working at the DC Rape Crisis Center when the organization got a letter from a man in prison saying he wanted to learn how to not be a rapist anymore. At first, she was furious. As a survivor of sexual violence, she wanted to write back pouring out her rage. Instead, she made a different choice, a choice to reject the response her trauma was pushing her towards. This choice would set her on the path towards developing a framework that would come to guide her whole career: Rather than calling people out, try to call even your unlikeliest allies in. Hold them accountable—but with love.
Calling In is at once a handbook, a manifesto, and a memoir—because the power of Loretta Ross’s message comes from who she is and what she’s lived through. She’s a Black woman who’s deprogrammed white supremacists, and a survivor who’s taught convicted rapists the principles of feminism. With stories from her five remarkable decades in activism, she vividly illustrates why calling people in—inviting them into conversation instead of conflict and focusing on your shared values over a desire for punishment—is the more strategic choice if you want to make real change. And she shows you how to do so, whether in the workplace, on a college campus, or in your living room.
Courageous, awe-inspiring, and blisteringly authentic, Calling In is a “masterclass in constructive confrontation” (Adam Grant) and a practical new solution from one of our country’s most extraordinary change-makers—one anyone can learn to use to transform frustrating and divisive conflicts that stand in the way of real connection with the people in your life.
Customer Reviews
Mixed Response
I greatly appreciated Loretta Ross’s expansive vocabulary and command of the English language. The focus of her book, to counter the harm to human relationships by cancel-culture tactics through her calling in methodologies is noble and articulated very well. The book shines when she shares deeply personal struggles from her past. Some inflicted upon her, and some self-inflicted. I give her high praise for the vulnerability demonstrated.
I did find the book self-contradictory and often a very liberal treatise. She implores us not to hate as we progress in calling in, yet names the types of people she hates. She states opinions as facts, some of which are blatantly false. (E.g. “Police make communities less safe.” In a short period of time I found multiple studies by disinterested third party entities proving just the opposite.) I very much dislike our current President doing such. I had hoped she would rise above such.
If I ever had the chance to meet Loretta Ross, I would thank her for her promotion of calling in. Still, I would tell anyone that asked me that I wished I had not spent the $19.95 for the book (audio).