UF historian Ibram Kendi wins National Book Award 

Kendi discusses racism past and present.

Ibram X. Kendi won the National Book Award for nonfiction on Wednesday for "Stamped from the Beginning: The Definitive History of Racist Ideas in America." The book has been praised nation-wide for turning our ideas about racism upside-down.


In his relentless odyssey through the making of America's particular brand of prejudice, Kendi, an assistant professor of African American history at the University of Florida, calls into question everyone from well-meaning historical heroes to our country’s Founding Fathers.

"Racist ideas prevent us from seeing racial discrimination and that is why it's so important for us to understand how they were developed, disseminated and enshrined." - Ibram X. Kendi

President Lyndon B. Johnson meets with Martin Luther King Jr. after signing the Voting Rights Act  in 1965.

Kendi is the third African-American to win in the nonfiction category, according to the National Book Foundation's website. His book challenges our assumptions about racism by exposing the development of racist ideas—and their connection to racist actions and policies throughout our history. Racist ideas prevent us from seeing racial discrimination and that is why it’s so important for us to understand how they were developed, disseminated and enshrined, Kendi told UF News.

"I spent years looking at the absolute worst of America, but in the end, I never lost faith," said Kendi during the National Book Award ceremony held in New York City on November 16. “In the midst of the human ugliness of racism, there is the human beauty of the resistance to racism.”


2016 @NationalBook Award for Nonfiction! Yes! Just landed back in Florida but I feel like I'm still in the clouds. What an honor! #NBAwards pic.twitter.com/5HFFUw87kM

— Ibram X. Kendi (@DrIbram) November 17, 2016

While pro-slavery thinkers were the first to advance racist thought, some who waved protest banners or wielded war against racial injustice also helped to cementing racist ideas, according to Kendi's book. They did so by seeking freedom, but not equality, for example.




"That's why this history is so complex, and why I chose to write a history of racist ideas, instead of racists. Because some, if not most Americans have held both racist ideas of black inferiority and antiracist ideas of racial equality," he said.

"In the midst of the human ugliness of racism, there is the human beauty of the resistance to racism." - Ibram X. Kendi

The 1963 March on Washington.

Kendi said racist ideas have played a part in the historical development of national policies, ranging from enslavement to incarcerations to healthcare. "Since the days of American slavery, racial disparities and inequities between the racial groups have been a consistent part of American society," Kendi said. “For generations of Americans, racist ideas about there being something genetically, culturally or behaviorally wrong or inferior about black people, for example, have rationalized and normalized these disparities and inequities.”

But racist ideas usually wash away when the racist policies they are defending and rationalizing are washed away, he said. Kendi describes racist ideas as the public relations arm of a company of racial discriminators that produces racial disparities. “Eliminate the company, and the public relations arm goes down too,” he said.

"I will never lose my faith that you and I can create an anti-racist America." – Ibram X. Kendi

President Barack Obama, the US's first African American president, takes the stage to address the nation.

Despite our painful history of racism and current racial tensions, Kendi has hope. He says he has to have hope because without hope for change, we won't press for change, and then no change is guaranteed. "I will never lose my faith that you and I can create an anti-racist America," he said Wednesday night.


Story by Stephenie Livingston

Header image by UF Communications

Shorthand layout by Rachel Wayne

Images from Wikimedia Commons