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From:Social Justice (Vol. 30, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedTHERE HAS BEEN A RECENT REVIVAL OF CRITICAL INTEREST IN "IMPRISONED intellectuals" (in the form of a conference and anthology) as sources of theoretical and practical instruction, as well as figures of political...
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From:The Black Scholar (Vol. 42, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedSHIRLEY CHISOLM is an announced candidate for President of the United States for 1972. Long a fighter for black and women's rights; she became the first black woman in the history of this country to be elected to the...
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From:MELUS (Vol. 26, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedNationalism ... assigned everyone his place in life, man and woman, normal and abnormal, native and foreigner; any confusion between these categories threatened chaos and loss of control. --George Mosse, Nationalism...
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From:Ethnic Studies Review (Vol. 42, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThe author reflects on his life growing up as an Asian American in California, his experiences during the 1960s, and his involvement in the 1969 Third World Strike at UC Berkeley, as well as the transformative role these...
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From:The Mississippi Quarterly (Vol. 69, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedAfter the Brown versus Board of Education ruling in 1954, THERE was hope that the United States would finally overcome its legacy of anti-black racism. So moved by the court's decision was Ralph Ellison that on...
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From:Journal of Global South Studies (Vol. 36, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedMokhtefi, Elaine. Algiers, Third World Capital: Freedom Fighters, Revolutionaries, Black Panthers. London: Verso, 2018. In Algiers, Third World Capital: Freedom Fighters, Revolutionaries, Black Panthers, Elaine...
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From:Journal of African American Studies (Vol. 23, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedThis article considers the possibilities and limitations of multiracial alliances and antiracist organizing in and beyond the USA by analyzing the Rainbow Coalition of Revolutionary Solidarity in Chicago from 1969 to...
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From:African American Review (Vol. 52, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedHis Goat, Our Lamb: Soul on Ice and James Baldwin as Instructive Victim I n his prison-time memoir Soul on Ice, Eldridge Cleaver, Black Power ideologue provocateur, attacked the racial authenticity and manhood of...
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From:American Libraries (Vol. 35, Issue 9)Papers that belonged to Eldridge Cleaver (1935-1998), cofounder of the Black Panther Party, have been donated to Denver Public Library's Blair-Caldwell African American Research Library. An unidentified woman found the...
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From:Obsidian: Literature and Arts in the African Diaspora (Vol. 46, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedIn the presentation we prepared for the "The Black Arts Movement in the United States and Algeria" conference at Abdelhamid Ben Badis University of Mostaganem, Algeria, in November 2019, we addressed the conference's...
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From:College Literature (Vol. 37, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedAbstract The essay argues that prison writing bears not only a common subject but recurrent, formal traits, and that these generic traits emerge directly from prison writing's material links to the strategies of...
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From:Texas Studies in Literature and Language (Vol. 52, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedDuring the 1950s and 1960s, James Baldwin, Norman Mailer, and Eldridge Cleaver initiated a literary discussion on race and masculinity that explored the undercurrents of conflict and power traversing the Beat, Civil...