Melanie Springer Mock, a professor of English at George Fox University, is author of Finding Our Way Forward: When the Children We Love Become Adults.

Posts By This Author

Far-Right Candidates Took Over My Hometown's School Board

by Melanie Springer Mock 11-30-2023
The school district is back to bipartisan leadership, but exclusionary policies and white supremacy have not lost their stranglehold.
The image shows two hands holding open a book with colorful scribbles and letters coming out of it.

Master1305 / Shutterstock 

The school district is back to bipartisan leadership, but exclusionary policies and white supremacy have not lost their stranglehold.

How Racism Reaches the Womb

by Melanie Springer Mock 08-02-2023
'Pregnant While Black' considers how and why Black mothers in the U.S. are dying.
The book 'Pregnant While Black' features a black pregnant woman dressed in a red dress while holding her stomach. The cover's backdrop has waves of cyan, yellow, orange, and red. The book hovers at an angle, casting a shadow against a pink-red backdrop.

Pregnant While Black: Advancing Justice for Maternal Health in America, by Monique Rainford / Broadleaf Books

WHEN TORI BOWIE'S autopsy report was released in June, the cause of death stunned many track fans. The 32-year-old sprinter had won several medals at the 2016 Olympics. On May 2, Bowie was found dead in her apartment; the one-time “World’s Fastest Woman” had been eight months pregnant and was in labor when she died.

Bowie’s tragic death caused renewed attention to an ongoing health crisis affecting Black women in the United States. Despite being relatively young and in presumably good health, Bowie’s autopsy indicated she suffered from eclampsia and respiratory distress, pregnancy complications experienced by Black women in the U.S. at much higher rates than other demographics.

In Pregnant While Black: Advancing Justice for Maternal Health in America, Dr. Monique Rainford addresses this troubling truth: Black mothers in the U.S. are dying. They face more risks in pregnancy than white and non-white Hispanic women living in the United States.