Cover of “Black Meme: A History of the Images that Make Us”

Black Meme:A History of the Images that Make Us

  • Paperback

    + free ebook

    Sale price $21.95
    Page redirects on selection
    Preorder
  • Hardback

    + free ebook

    Sale price $19.95
    Page redirects on selection
  • Ebook

    Regular price $9.99 Sale price $4.00
    Page redirects on selection

A history of Black imagery that rewrites the history of visual culture and technology now by the bestselling author of Glitch Feminism

**Shortlisted for the NBCC Award for Criticism**

Representations of Blackness have always been integral to our understanding of of the modern world. In Black Meme, Legacy Russell, award-winning author of the groundbreaking Glitch Feminism, explores the construct, culture, and material of the “meme” as mapped to Black visual culture from 1900 to present day. Mining both archival and contemporary media Russell explores the impact of Blackness, Black life, and death on contemporary conceptions of viral culture, borne in the age of the internet.

These meditations include: the circulation of Lynching postcards; Jet Magazine’s publication of a picture of Emmett Till in his open casket; how the televised broadcast of protesters in Selma enters the nation’s living room and changed the debate on civil rights; how a citizen-recorded video of the Rodney King beating at the hands of the LAPD became known as the “first viral video”; what the Anita Hill hearings tell us about the media’s creation of the Black icon; Tamara Lanier’s fight to reclaim the photos of her enslaved ancestors, Renty and Delia, from Harvard’s archive; the Facebook Live recording by Lavish “Diamond” Reynolds of the murder of her partner Philando Castile by the police after being stopped for a broken tail light; and more.

Legacy Russell explores the power of these tokens and argues that without the contributions of Black people, digital culture would not exist in its current form.

The description and cover above are taken from the Paperback (2026) edition. Other editions may vary.

Reviews

  • Black Meme makes clear we are an image based world and the foundational force shaping our understanding of this is Blackness. That acknowledgement naturally then brings forward questions of agency and authorship. Russell expertly explores and guides readers through the many quandaries therein allowing us to arrive on the other side, eyes wide and taking in the many, many sights (screens) almost as if for the first time tasked with better queries for our AI-powered-hyper-visible world but still with familiar demand: Reparations now! Free the Black meme!

    Arimeta DiopVanity Fair
  • Russell teases out how Black life and Black death shaped viral culture even before the birth of the internet.

    23 Books We Can’t Wait to Read in 2024Vulture
  • Toni Morrison considered ways to fight back against dehumanization in her lectures, collected as The Origin of Others. Images and language, she notes, have the power to "help us pursue the human project-which is to remain human and to block the dehumanization and estrangement of others." This recentering is what Russell proposes as a remedy: In order to address digital exploitation, she argues, we need to de- and reconstruct the conditions of digital culture, building "one predicated on new definitions of authorship."

    Kaila PhiloThe New Republic