B.A. Parker at Somerset Place plantation as a child. Courtesy of B.A. Parker hide caption
![GD 2020](https://cdn.statically.io/img/media.npr.org/assets/img/2020/09/21/codeswitch_genedemby_2020_1_sq-7683ced209222cf09525b70d25b68ee882b81014.jpg?s=100&c=85&f=jpeg)
Gene Demby
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A photo of Somerset Place plantation in North Carolina. B.A. Parker hide caption
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How one event in history can ripple through generations of a family
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The truth and lies behind one of the most banned books in America
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Author Jules Gill-Peterson poses next to her book, A Short History of Trans Misogyny Headshot by Kadji Amin and book cover design by Angela Lorenzo for Verso hide caption
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What the reaction to Trump's felony conviction tells us about the word "felon" Jackie Lay hide caption
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Laurence Fishburne as Doc Rivers in Clipped. Kelsey McNeal/FX hide caption
Putting the immigration "crisis" in historical perspective Jackie Lay hide caption
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At a march in support of Israel, one woman holds a sign saying, "Christians Stand with Israel." Getty Images hide caption
White evangelical Christians are some of Israel's biggest supporters. Why?
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Understanding the refugee experience, through a time-traveling British colonizer
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Illustration of a rally where "peaceful protesters" march alongside "violent looters." LA Johnson/NPR hide caption
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Author Daniel A. Olivas poses next to the cover of his recent book, Chicano Frankenstein Author headshot via publisher hide caption
In 'Chicano Frankenstein,' the undead are the new underpaid labor force
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As American Jews speak out on Israel, some see rifts in their communities
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Author Cristina Henriquez next to the cover of her new novel, The Great Divide Brian McConkey/Ecco hide caption
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Frederick Douglass visited Ireland in 1845 to drum up support for abolition. That launched generations of solidarity between Black civil rights and Irish republican activists. Jackie Lay/NPR hide caption