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    Gem Of The Ocean Analysis

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    seek redemption. In contrast to how Citizen feels about causing a person’s death, Caesar justifies his actions as necessary to protect the greater good. Black Mary affirms Caesar’s rationale by telling Eli “Caesar’s doing his job. That’s what the people can’t see” (Wilson 14). Noggle provides a description in which “Caesar, Black Mary’s brother and local constable, has fully absorbed the dominate society’s individualistic (capitalistic) attitude, and consistently exploits the community” (63).…

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    it was perceived as for so long in history. Race, they argue, is defined by expectations in which people are judged in everyday interactions. Because of these these expectations (“stereotypes”) of how people should act, which is especially dependent on their fluctuating social status, black stigmatization and white privilege are able to survive and flourish. In their research they discovered that people tended to be classified (and identify themselves) as “more white” or “more black” based on…

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    Jaybelle and thousands of other Filipino and Filipina immigrants bear the burden of scouring for finances while feeling discrimination as people of color in the work force, carry the reputation of their homeland through their behaviors amidst unfamiliar American culture, and hold a hope for the actualization of the American Dream. The significance behind Jaybelle’s transnational journey delves deeper than the blanket generalizations that “all Filipina immigrants are caretakers or nurses” and…

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    Doug McAdam’s Political Process and the Development of Black Insurgency, 1930-1970 chronicles the development and growth of the black protest movement through that changing political and social conditions that both created and denied political opportunities for black protest and contributed to the growth of the Civil Rights Movement from the 1950s onward. McAdam first traces the origins of the political and social conditions that denied blacks the political opportunities to organize and protest…

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    that blacks have equal rights with whites. In two contrasting articles, both the authors look at racism on very different levels. Edmund Morel tries to bring attention to the problem and wants others to stop it, while Cecil Rhodes feels that white people are the perfect race and that all countries should only be White Anglo-Saxon Protestants. Cecil Rhodes had a very strong faith, one that not many believe in now, but he wanted to spread his faith everywhere. He wanted the race to be White…

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    Blacks In Advertising

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    “The generalization of Blacks and their culture has been in American society for a long time, may it have been positive or negative, Blacks and their impact in advertising has dated back to colonial years of America and still makes an impact today.” Looking at brands and ads from the 1800s to now, do Blacks feel offended? From blackface, to racial terms, offensive nicknames (Jiggaboo, Mandingo, Jezebel, Mammy & etc), stereotypes and images, advertising had held a negative light on Blacks for…

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    The persistence of Ebonics defies the intentions behind the dehumanization of African people. Furthermore, the use of Ebonics in literature highlights this defiance and persistence. In Their Eyes Were Watching God, Hurston paints the picture of displaced descendants of enslaved Africans lacking their native tongue in the color of their innovative vibrant language (Ebonics). In her use of Ebonics, Hurston promotes the value of African American language while adequately displaying the complexity…

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    Beauty In The Media

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    Americans holding administration positions in the media. In this way a great deal of the pictures being indicated blacks had no power over. Despite the fact that there are such a variety of negative pictures of blacks in the media, black business people started demonstrating constructive pictures of their race and culture. In 1945, John H. Johnson, originator of Johnson Publishing Company, made Ebony Magazine. This is the place he put an exertion into showing positive good examples operating at…

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    Another Country is the story of the painful struggle of a group of friends trying to discover their true self by coming to terms with their darkest secrets. The story focuses on both the characters perception of his or her own self and the relationships between each character, which gives readers an inside look into the characters sense of emptiness and lack of gender and racial identity. Each character is written to support and contrast each others actions to show the reader the different ways…

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    Martin Luther King believed “we may have all come on different ships, but we 're in the same boat now.” This belief of equality inspires millions of people everyday, but before King there was Langston Hughes. Hughes, a poet during the 1920’s, living around the world and supporting African-Americans particularly for equality in America. Hughes is a prolific equality activist, implementing his anger, depression, culture, and oppression in his poems. Langston Hughes’s family, specifically his…

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