"But what about Black-on-Black crime?"
It's a question that poet, playwright and professor Claudia Rankine has been fielding ever since she toured the country for her 2014 bestseller "Citizen: An American Lyric." And she expects it for her latest work.
"It was never from a white person but always a South Asian guy trying to distance himself from me to show that he's not Black," Rankine said. "I understand. There's a level of anxiety associated with Blackness because of the violence and the history of degradation that comes with that. They want to have a chance to live."
Her new book, "Just Us: An American Conversation" — which brings Rankine to the Twin Cities via Zoom on Tuesday for the opening event of this fall's Talking Volumes — fearlessly addresses historic and contemporary examples of white privilege and supremacy.
Like "Citizen," it employs poems, essays and visual images. The mixed-media interface of photos and text, of the past surfacing in the present, makes "Just Us" almost like an art installation in book form. Published by Minneapolis' Graywolf Press, it completes a trilogy that started with "Don't Let Me Be Lonely," her 2004 meditation on solitude in a media-saturated world.
For Rankine, who teaches at Yale, the book is not just a matter of scholarly curiosity. She writes because her life depends on it.
We caught up with her recently for a conversation that has been edited for brevity and clarity.
Q: You've brought back the multigenre book, mixing your essays with poetry and photography, not to mention putting the footnotes right next to the subject matter.