Emily Farris
@emayfarris.bsky.social
14K followers 610 following 110 posts
Professor of Political Science who thinks you should care more about local politics (especially sheriffs) and foster dogs. Coauthor of 📖 Power of the Badge out now: https://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/P/bo220537347.html
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emayfarris.bsky.social
Nope! But they do have a whole section for your pets.
emayfarris.bsky.social
I am honestly surprised that Brown University bookstore has any graduate school dedicated merch.
emayfarris.bsky.social
That feeling when you go back to a place you lived (in grad school) and THERE’S A TRADER JOE’s ON THE CORNER NOW??
emayfarris.bsky.social
I think the costumes at the protests are a great strategy - it lets their identities stay hidden and it shows the absurdity of the federal governments’ grim portraits of cities.
Reposted by Emily Farris
propcazhpm.bsky.social
In 1857, Thomas Howland became Providence, RI's first Black elected official.

Later that year, he decided to emigrate to Liberia with his wife & daughter after the Dred Scott case denied Black people protections of U.S. citizenship. He was denied a passport.

Thomas Howland, 1856
John Blanchard
Portrait of a distringuished Black man from the 19th centrure wearing fine clothes, including  high collar and tie of the day.
Museum Text:
Thomas Howland, the subject of this unusually expressive portrait, was a dock worker in Providence, Rhode lsland, In 1857 he became the city's first Black elected oficial when he was amed warden of its Third Ward. However, that same year he decided to emigrate to Liberia with his wite and daughter, perhaps in response to the recent Supreme Court decision in the Dred Scott case that denied African Americans the protections of U.S. citizenship. Because of this decision, Howland's application for a passport was denied, despite his status as a free man with the right to vote in his home state (he did eventually make it to Liberia). Howland's confident posture echoes that of the earlier Portrait of a Gentleman shown nearby, the fashionable attire of both sitters serving to reinforce thelir self-possession.
Reposted by Emily Farris
wihorne.bsky.social
I’m teaching abt Red Summer today, when white vigilantes & National Guardsmen across the country harassed, detained, assaulted, & murdered Black Americans as part of a backlash against Black military service in WWI.
Red Summer of 1919
eji.org
emayfarris.bsky.social
That’s up there with corncob man but more relatable.
emayfarris.bsky.social
A Bentley for $1700, which maybe an option. 😀
emayfarris.bsky.social
What "deals" are available are for 2 days of a car rental.
emayfarris.bsky.social
Of course holiday weekend in Boston means there’s no cars elsewhere too. Argh.
emayfarris.bsky.social
Didn’t Enterprise’s slogan used to be “we pick you up”? Now it seems to be we cancel your reservation and leave you stranded.
emayfarris.bsky.social
Encouraging protest, property destruction, and crime in the name of rights in the harbor of Boston, teach them young.
Reposted by Emily Farris
jordiedavies.bsky.social
New article: "Fundamentals of Solidarity: Race-Based Caucus Organizing in Houston" is live at Urban Affairs Review. I'm grateful to the organizers who let me into their world and work so we could produce this piece. Check it out 👇
Fundamentals of Solidarity: Race-Based Caucus Organizing in Houston - Elizabeth Jordie Davies, 2025
Grassroots organizations often espouse multiracial solidarity as a value but struggle with putting this value into practice. How can organizations, especially t...
doi.org
emayfarris.bsky.social
Religious freedom arguments suffer from some of the same problems of free speech.

If you are truly pro religious freedom, you would be anti this attack on religion.
phillewis.bsky.social
Rev. David Black stood in front of a Chicago-area ICE facility and began to pray.

The masked ICE agents on the roof responded by firing pepper balls, with one striking him in the head

religionnews.com/2025/10/07/i...
Reposted by Emily Farris
elisewang.bsky.social
One of the more incredible stories out of LA this year has been how a taco review blog became the best on-the-ground coverage of ICE raids in the city.

They do a dispatch every day, follow-up on the kidnapped people (which almost no media outlet has done), and fact-check government claims.
motherjones.com
@lataco.bsky.social first began as a blog documenting local Mexican cuisine. Now, it’s an essential reporting powerhouse to the city as Trump’s mass deportation plot unfolds.

Check out the latest from our friends at Reveal: tinyurl.com/4cm2bsdr
emayfarris.bsky.social
Food and music, Matt - really?
emayfarris.bsky.social
When we were putting out our Halloween decorations this year, a woman told us that her dog really likes to walk by our Christmas decorations each year, and that amuses me to no end.
betsysneller.bsky.social
Please know that if put up Halloween decorations there’s a 3 year old in your neighborhood somewhere who is obsessed with them.
emayfarris.bsky.social
People nowadays have a lot of thoughts about what the word ‘Christian’ means, but I don’t think that’s been settled ever.