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Do You Know that You Have Black Friends?
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01 September 2026

Conveys the experiential realities of those racialized as Black and, in turn, demonstrates that biological distinctions are only surface-level cues by which a racialized system assigned real lived experiences.
"I have Black friends" is a common defense invoked by White Americans when accused of anti-Black racism or simple racial ignorance. The individuals who rely on Black proximity as a defense only use Blackness to exonerate themselves but likely have no knowledge of the experiences imposed on Black people in a racialized system. Do You Know that You Have Black Friends? facilitates a reeducation to White America by posing a series of direct questions to the reader in each chapter about the racial reality of Black Americans. Each chapter then answers the query using a unique combination of historiographies, public opinion data, and peer-reviewed literature—making this book more than a survey of the Black experience but an instruction on the inherently discriminatory system of race. At the center of the book is an exclusive set of interviews of transgenerational Black Americans—individuals whose lives span multiple generations and legal racial systems in the United States. Their unfiltered, lifelong narratives ground this book, proving it to be more than an academic exercise but a legitimate reeducation on race and the Black experience.
"Dr. Lewis provides a much-needed examination of the social and political impacts of race as a social construct. At a moment when America remains sharply divided along racial lines, this book demonstrates how and why race continues to matter by grounding firsthand accounts of racial hostility within the academic discourse on African American politics. Through a careful exploration of the functions and lived realities of race in the United States, Dr. Lewis offers a well-researched and thoughtfully constructed work that is essential for scholars seeking a deeper understanding of the real consequences of racial hostility and its impact on African Americans." — Emmitt Y. Riley III, the University of the South