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14 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back

Wo-Haw

Title: "Wo-Haw Between Two Worlds"


Author: A drawing by Kiowa artist/warrior Wo-Haw




1. Was born about 1855, was a Kiowa from the southern Great Plains around western Oklahoma


2. After the war, Wo-haw was imprisoned with 71 other accused combatants at Fort Marion

Fort Marion

Title: "Wo-Haw Between Two Worlds"


Author: A drawing by Kiowa artist/warrior Wo-Haw




1. Afterthe war, Wo-haw was imprisoned with 71 other accused combatants at Fort Marion in Saint. Augustine, Florida.


2. The Fort Marion prisoners were given art supplies and at least 26 of them produced drawings



Capt. Pratt

Title: "Wo-Haw Between Two Worlds"


Author: A drawing by Kiowa artist/warrior Wo-Haw




1. The army officer in charge of the prisoners


2. Believed that Indians could and should turn away from their Native culture in order to be assimilated into white culture.

Span One

Title: The Prisoner Who Wore Glasses


Author: Bessie Head




1. Composed often men and they were all political prisoners.


2. Span One had got out of control. They were the best thieves and liars in the camp.

Bessie Head

Title: The Prisoner Who Wore Glasses


Author: Bessie Head




1. Born in Pieter­maritzburg, South Africa, in 1937. The name on her birth certificate was Besesi Amelia Emery.


2. Her mother was white, her father African. Head lived her entire life unaware that she had two older siblings, half brothers whowere white.



Hannetjie

Title: The Prisoner Who Wore Glasses


Author: Bessie Head




1. Up until the arrival of his arrival, no warder had dared to beat any member of Span One and no warder lasted more than a week with them


2.He confessed to the theft of the fertilizer and was fined a large sum of money

Brille

Title: The Prisoner Who Wore Glasses


Author: Bessie Head




1. The Afrikaans word for someone who wears glasses.


2. He had 12 children and liven in 16 of bedlam

Civil disobedience

Title: Letter from Birmingham Jail


Author: Martin Luther King




1. The refusal to obey a law on the grounds that it is immoral or unjust in itself.


2. Because of civil disobedience, academic freedom is a reality today because Socrates practiced it.

Self purification

Title: Letter from Birmingham Jail


Author: Martin Luther King




1. One of the 4 basic steps in a nonviolent campaign


2. The process of selfpurification includes series of workshops on nonviolence, and asking "Areyou able to accept blows without retaliating?"

direct action

Title: Letter from Birmingham Jail


Author: Martin Luther King




1. Nonviolent direct action seeks to create such a crisis and foster such a tension that acommunity which has constantly refused to negotiate is forced to confront the issue.


2. The purpose of our direct action program is to create a situation so crisis packed that it willinevitably open the door to negotiation.

Haemon

Title: Antigone


Author: Sophocles




1. The son of Kreon and Antigone's finance


2. He refuses the happiness Creon offers him and follows Antigone to a tragic demise

Creon

Title: Antigone


Author: Sophocles




1. King of Thebes, uncle and guardian of Antigone and Ismene.


2. He is the instigator of Antigone's death sentence



Polyneices

Title: Antigone


Author: Sophocles




1. Left out to rot on the pain of death


2. Antigone covered his body with dirt even though no one was allowed to burry him.

"A Call for Unity"

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