Slow Violence, Ranita Ray
Slow Violence, Ranita Ray
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Slow Violence
Confronting Dark Truths in the American Classroom

Author: Ranita Ray

Narrator: Lipica Shah

Unabridged: 10 hr 35 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 08/05/2025


Synopsis

A powerful exposé of the American public education system's indifference toward marginalized children and the "slow violence" that fashions schools into hostile work and learning environments.

In 2017, sociologist Ranita Ray stepped inside a fourth-grade classroom in one of the nation’s largest majority-minority districts in Las Vegas, Nevada. She was there to conduct research on the lack of resources and budget cuts that regularly face public schools. However, a few months into her immersion, a disturbed Ray recognized that that greatest impediment to students was the “slow violence” that preys on their minds, bodies, and spirits at the hands of teachers and administrators who are charged with their care.

Slow Violence lays bare the routine indifference, racism, and verbal and emotional abuse and harassment that teachers and administrators perpetrate routinely against the most vulnerable children in our schools. We meet Nazli, a bright, funny Black girl, and math wiz, who loses her baby brother, and is told that “grit” will enable her to rise above her grief. Reggie is a devoted student and curious scholar, but his path to success is derailed when teachers fashion him as a predator after they find him looking at two inappropriate photos on his iPad. There’s Nalin, a shy and determined Filipina who has just arrived in the US, but is ignored based on her educator’s assumption that “Asians” are “good at math.” Her entire journey through school is darkened by this stereotype. And there’s Miguel, a sharp, distracted Latino boy who can’t overcome his teachers’ urge to incorrectly diagnose him with autism.

Bolstered by an empathetic and passionate voice as well as the latest breaking research in the social sciences, Ray goes beyond timeworn discussions about the school-to-prison pipeline, funding, and achievement gaps to directly address what happens behind the closed doors of classrooms, introducing a compelling—and crucial—new perspective into the conversation about our education system.

In the warm, luminous spirit of character-driven books like Invisible Child, Slow Violence allows us to see that the way we’ve tried to make a start in education reform is wrong. To forge new approaches that foster young minds and flourishing generations we have to start with how children experience the classroom. Unflinchingly, Slow Violence tells us—and shows us where to begin.

A Macmillan Audio production from St. Martin’s Press

About Ranita Ray

Ranita Ray is Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of New Mexico, where she holds an endowed chair. For 15 years, her research program has centered on youth, education, and gender and racial injustice. Ray is a 2019 National Academy of Education/Spencer fellow, as well as a 2018 Racial Democracy and Criminal Justice Network fellow. Her research has been funded by the National Science Foundation several times, including in 2018 when her team was awarded a large grant to study urban inequalities in Las Vegas. Slate, The Atlantic, The New York Times, the Las Vegas Review Journal, Las Vegas Sun, and the Las Vegas Weekly have featured Ray’s research and original writing. She is author of The Making of a Teenage Service Class, which won four prizes and is widely adopted for classroom use. In addition, Ray’s TED talk is often used by educators. And, Slow Violence was shortlisted for the 2024 Lukas Work-in-Progress Prize.

About Lipica Shah

Lipica Shah (she/her) is a half Bengali, half Kumaoni, fully Indian-American narrator, actor, and inclusion advocate. A SAG-AFTRA and Actors Equity Association member based in the Bronx, she thrives on collaboration and script development, with a special affinity for new plays. Lipica’s dynamic vocal skills, facility for accents and languages, and love of storytelling led her to audiobooks, and she’s had the privilege of narrating a wide range of genres, though her passion is non-fiction for all ages (especially current events, crime, science, politics, and history). As an actor, she has originated roles at Manhattan Theatre Club, The New Group, Mixed Blood Theatre Company, Cal Shakes, and American Conservatory Theater, among others. On screen she’s appeared on ABC, CBS, FOX, NBC, HBO, Showtime, USA, Comedy Central, Netflix, and recurring on MAX’s The Girls on the Bus. Hear her in the video game Starfield and English dubs of Pokémon, A Silent Voice, Mobile Suit Gundam: The Origin, and more. As an inclusion advocate, she co-founded the nonprofit 1497, an organization committed to supporting and uplifting artists of South Asian descent and challenging their historical exclusion from and underrepresentation in the American film and television industry. She also serves on the Steering Committee of the Asian American Performers Action Coalition, with whom she received Tony Honors for Excellence in the Theatre. In her spare time, Lipica enjoys traveling, birdwatching, doing crossword puzzles in pen, lighting one-match campfires, and running for inordinate amounts of time outdoors.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Dona's on August 14, 2025

Pre-Read Notes: Racism is alive and well in the US and sometimes the worst perpetrators aren't even individuals, but institutions, like education, medicine, and the voter system. These books are always worth a read, to see the data collected, organized, and made meaningful. "Not everything is lost. Te......more

Goodreads review by Steve Williams on April 28, 2025

As a white male school teacher in a Title 1 high school, my opinion on this text may come across as biased. But, I will do my best to be honest about this text. Are there teachers who do not belong in a classroom? yes. Are there teachers who bully children? yes. Are their teachers who harass kids bas......more

Goodreads review by Gina on July 30, 2025

4.5 - “What might it look like to interrogate the logic of schooling? Can we move beyond academic achievement and think about children thriving in all their humanity?” Big thanks to St. Martin’s Press for the ARC in exchange for an honest review! This was a hard read. It chronicled Ranita Ray’s time i......more

Goodreads review by Stanjay on July 27, 2025

It’s always a joy to read the work of scholars who are deeply committed to understanding human nature—especially those who strive for meaningful change. Change doesn’t come easily; it requires acknowledging hard truths, sitting with discomfort, studying the issues in depth, and then courageously sha......more

Goodreads review by Jessica on August 24, 2025

Slow Violence is a quietly devastating exposé of America’s classrooms—where the real damage isn’t explosive, but insidious. Ray, a sociologist embedded in Las Vegas schools between 2017 and 2020, brings readers face-to-face with children like Nazli, a grieving Black math whiz urged to summon “grit”......more


Quotes

“[An] alarming exposé … This adds to the chorus of provocative recent studies positing that majority-white environments negatively impact students of color.”
Publishers Weekly

"In Slow Violence, Ranita Ray manages to artfully and intellectually destroy the casual deployment of classroom "microaggressions" and "benevolent racism" opting instead to situate the brutality of our classrooms as slow, absolutely destructive violence. The book is a blending of what's possible when tenacious genius cultural workers take our educational past and future seriously."
Kiese Laymon, Author of Heavy: An American Memoir

"At a moment when diversity, equity and inclusion are under attack and re-segregation is underway in American institutions, Ranita Ray’s urgently needed book critically examines an overworked, majority white teaching force from a rarely heard perspective: that of the majority non-white school children who fill America's (sometimes windowless) classrooms. With pathos, care, and the righteous fury its subject deserves, Slow Violence will move readers to tears and, hopefully, to action."
Steven W. Thrasher, author, The Viral Underclass and former education reporter for the Village Voice

"A beautiful and aching book—at once a careful meditation on the hope we find in the eyes of our nation’s most vulnerable children, and a searing indictment of our failure to recognize their humanity...Ray shows us, in masterful strokes and through the eyes of children she followed, that teaching is a job, and that teachers are people who bring their gifts and biases into the classroom. [It] will change how you think about education."
Reuben Jonathan Miller, author of Halfway Home

"Gripping and powerful...Ray's clear-eyed and full-hearted analysis shows how the precarity of public education—particularly in communities marginalized by systemic racism and economic injustice—can push teachers to punch down on kids and parents who are even more powerless than they are.”
Jessica Calarco, author of Holding It Together