Jill Louise Busby spent years in the nonprofit sector specializing in diversity and inclusion. She spoke at academic institutions, businesses, and detention centers on the topics of race, power, and privilege, and delivered more than 200 workshops to nonprofit organizations all over the California Bay Area. In 2016, fed up with what passed as progressive in the Pacific Northwest, Busby uploaded a one-minute video about race, white institutions, and faux liberalism to Instagram. The video received millions of views across social platforms. Her memoir-in-essays Unfollow Me: Essays On Complicity (Bloomsbury Publishing) retraces her steps in a collection of writings on race, authenticity, and ambition. Busby’s social commentary manages to be both wryly funny and achingly open-hearted as she recounts her shape-shifting moves among the subtle hierarchies of progressive communities. Unfollow Me is a sharply personal and self-questioning critique of racism, respectability politics, and all the places where fear masquerades as progress. Publishers Weekly called it “a stirring take on a young woman’s search for identity and the fight for racial equity.”
January 14, 2025
Busby, Jill Louise
by
Jill Louise Busby spent years in the nonprofit sector specializing in diversity and inclusion. She spoke at academic institutions, businesses, and detention centers on