Preorder Libertroph Magazine Issue 02 (Print)

$25.00

Libertroph Magazine is a collection of art and stories about white anti-racist organizing past and present. Libertroph is an organizing tool and invitation for more white people to take up the life-giving work of anti-racist organizing.

Libertroph’s second issue’s theme is Lineage. Pre-order your copy now! It will be delivered to you in the Fall 2026.

Lineage. Because we all descend from complex beings. People who resisted, assimilated, took risks, enacted and perpetuated violence, and believed in better futures. 

As white anti-racists, how often do we revere Black and Indigenous ancestors while turning away from our own? As critical lovers of our ancestors, what are we learning from their choices? How might we repair the pain inherent to many of their decisions – the losses, violence, and trauma that’s resulted?

And who are the white elders and ancestors we are celebrating, the ones we can look to as models and guiding lights in our anti-racism practice? Who are the ones who acted against the status quo? How do we channel their legacies to undo racism? 

What are we inheriting through our lineages? What do we want to preserve, what must we release? 

What legacy are each of us shaping for our own lineages – past, present, and future? 

Libertroph Magazine is a collection of art and stories about white anti-racist organizing past and present. Libertroph is an organizing tool and invitation for more white people to take up the life-giving work of anti-racist organizing.

Libertroph’s second issue’s theme is Lineage. Pre-order your copy now! It will be delivered to you in the Fall 2026.

Lineage. Because we all descend from complex beings. People who resisted, assimilated, took risks, enacted and perpetuated violence, and believed in better futures. 

As white anti-racists, how often do we revere Black and Indigenous ancestors while turning away from our own? As critical lovers of our ancestors, what are we learning from their choices? How might we repair the pain inherent to many of their decisions – the losses, violence, and trauma that’s resulted?

And who are the white elders and ancestors we are celebrating, the ones we can look to as models and guiding lights in our anti-racism practice? Who are the ones who acted against the status quo? How do we channel their legacies to undo racism? 

What are we inheriting through our lineages? What do we want to preserve, what must we release? 

What legacy are each of us shaping for our own lineages – past, present, and future?