Remembering Nat King Cole and his quiet resistance

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Six decades after the death of musician and actor Nat King Cole, his songs remain popular. What is less acknowledged than the mark he made on American music is how he challenged the status quo and contributed to the Civil Rights Movement.

University of Dayton sacred music scholar Donna M. Cox writes that Cole was “not just a groundbreaking musician but also a quiet, resolute advocate for social justice.” He refused to perform in Las Vegas when faced with blatant discrimination, forcing hotel management to back down.

After being attacked onstage during a 1956 performance in Birmingham, Alabama, Cole recorded a protest song. “We Are Americans Too” is a powerful statement of “belonging and a challenge to racial exclusion,” Cox writes. It was perhaps the only tune he recorded that was “specifically political.”

And Nat King Cole’s success paved the way for future generations of Black artists to record their own hits and to speak up when they feel the need.

This week, we also liked articles about why skiers are so susceptible to sunburns on their faces, how Philadelphia’s Chinatown has managed to thrive, and what happens when bosses abuse their employees and then suddenly change course.

[ The latest on philanthropy and nonprofits. Sign up for our weekly newsletter, Giving Today.]

Kalpana Jain

Senior Religion + Ethics Editor, Director of the Global Religion Journalism Initiative

Nat King Cole performs in Copenhagen, Denmark, in April 1960. Ebbe Wrae/JP Jazz Archive/Getty Images

Nat King Cole’s often overlooked role in the Civil Rights Movement

Donna M. Cox, University of Dayton

March 17 marks 106 years since the birth of musician Nat King Cole, whose success paved the way for future generations of Black artists.

Skiers can sunburn easily for reasons that have nothing to do with the mountain’s elevation. Matt Bird/Stone via Getty Images

Why do skiers sunburn so easily on the slopes? A snow scientist explains

Steven R. Fassnacht, Colorado State University

The powdery snow that skiers and snowboarders love, especially on crystal clear days, plays a big role in how much your skin will burn.

Black and Latino communities are disproportionately affected by mass surveillance, studies show. Vicente Méndez/Getty Images

We study mass surveillance for social control, and we see Trump laying the groundwork to ‘contain’ people of color and immigrants

Brittany Friedman, University of Southern California; Raquel Delerme, University of Southern California

Create a moral panic. Blame it on certain people. Commence monitoring. Deploy droves of security agents. Detain or remove the targets. Sound familiar?

The Conversation News Quiz 🧠

 
 
 
 

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