African American basketball players

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    Skin bleaching is one of the most common lengths that some dark-skinned African-American women go through in order to feel beautiful. Skin bleaching is a process in which one applies a bleaching ointment or regular household bleach to the skin in order to appear lighter. Cosmetic surgery is another extreme measure that is taken by dark-skinned women. Many dark-skinned African-American women have had nose jobs and lip reduction surgery in order to gain the features that have been…

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    School of Communication at Washington State University, expresses in his article, “Television Viewing, and Perceptions about Race, “Historically in family centered shows, African Americans have been portrayed as less educated, from broken homes, and possessing lower status jobs than white” (3). Our perception of African Americans is going to be that they are less educated because that is what the television is portraying them as. Television continues to affect our perception of ethnicity…

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    Strange Fruit Analysis

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    the song “Strange Fruit” the singer of the song sings about some rather strange fruit. The singer is an African American, female Jazz singer called Billie Holiday. “Strange Fruit” was released during 1939 in the time where segregation was still pretty big in the south. Lynching had been happening for a few years before the song was released. While definitely a way to dehumanize African Americans, which is wrong, there was some reasons for them other than simple hating of a different race. Some…

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    and Italian) that all seem to coexist in a harmony. Segregation relation can be described as separating people based on race or ethnicity into specific groups that have their own rights/roles in society. This can be easily exemplified in the post-american Civil War era into the 1960’s with the racial segregation in the South of the United States. Based on the doctrine “separate but equal” after the court ruling of the Plessy vs Ferguson trial, segregation based on skin color was enforced…

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    than that. Racism will always be around you, if it is against whites, blacks, Asians, or any other race. People will never change, that’s the sad thing about this world. There will always be discrimination, segregation, and “no” freedom for African Americans, even thirty years from now. People will always discriminate other races or different genders. Let’s just focus on the race discrimination,…

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    a very inhumane system in the south. Where African Americans were treated as property; meaning these humans could be sold and brought away from their families. The north wanted to end slavery, and industrialize America as a whole. This caused the blood Civil War between the north and the south. As a result of the war, President Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation; which lead to the 13th, 14th, and 15th amendments. Giving African American freedom, citizenship, and the right to…

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    still did not see the truth behind the matter of slavery. This is a very hypocritical way that the people of the south viewed their colored brothers. The U.S. should have seen the obvious truth behind slavery before we began to enslave the innocent African…

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    The age of rapid urbanization was upon the United States in the early 19th century was a big push for most Americans, giving up their farmsteads and pitchforks for skyscrapers and hammers. Americans moving from rural areas to begin with was a rough start, just after the civil war tensions and racism still was very prevalent in the segregated south so many African Americans chose to move to the urban north to try and escape the racial violence. Once the populations in cities began to rise…

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    Ku Klux Klan Analysis

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    The border states between the North and South faced a migration of African Americans attempting to begin a life anywhere except under the oppression of Jim Crow and the bleak conditions of the postbellum South. As extremist movements and relational events occurred throughout the nation, urban areas experienced a renaissance of black culture. Was this period truly the “birth of a nation?” As black culture graced America with music, art, and literature, white Protestant women attempted to gain…

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    Hughes is one if the main reasons black culture is celebrated today. Langston Hughes, or James Mercer, was born on February 1, 1902 in Joplin Missouri. He died May 22, 1967 in New York City (Webster 209). Born with a racial background of African, French, Native American, and English ancestry, Hughes used his background throughout his life as an inspiration for his art. Hughes attended elementary school in Lincoln, Illinois. In his class, he was elected as class poet, which may have started his…

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