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racism | The novel The Absolutely True Diary of a Part -Time Indian written by Sherman Alexie also displays the concept of how meeting people can impact our lives and change our perspective on how we perceive each other when we pursue the main character Junior. The book follows a fourteen-year-old boy, Arnold Spirit (Junior), l... |
racism | Before Junior moved to Reardan he only thought so little of himself he thought he was nothing more than “just a poor ass kid living with his poor ass parents on a poor ass Indian Reservation”. Race is a pretty huge deal for The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian. Why? Because it gives Arnold Spirit, Jr. a good... |
racism | In the following year, Gordy helps Arnold with learning and he shows him how joyful it can be to learn new things. They became quite acquainted to each other because they were so much alike. Gordy teaches Junior that life doesn’t offer many big things to celebrate, so learn to appreciate the smaller things in life and ... |
racism | Junior eventually realises that all white people are not the same and Roger and Penelope helped alter his perspective. This reveals how meeting new people can help alter your mindset because if Junior had never met Roger, Penelope or Gordy he would’ve never achieved so much at Reardan High School and still would be liv... |
racism | The Blind Side is a life lesson more than it is a film. Directed by John Lee Hancock, this film shows us that when new people enter our lives we tend to have a different outlook on various things. Through the movie Leigh Anne discovers Michael’s problems and also changes perspective on people like Michael. She helps un... |
racism | Leigh Anne gets to know Michael throughout the film; learning about his past, his strengths and weaknesses. She understands how he thinks and understands that he is very protective of family. Now that he is apart of the Tuohy family he will protect them no matter what. When Leigh Anne takes Michael shopping for the fir... |
racism | Racism is human nature; it is hardwired into our brains. Prejudice has existed for as long as humans have; it’s almost like an instinct. Fortunately, this is false, discrimination is not part of human nature. However, this is what it seems like in Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird, a classic novel that is both loved a... |
racism | The definition of courage is the ability to do something that frightens one. Delving deeper into the definition, it is found that there are multiple types of courage, one being, physical courage, which is overcoming the fear of physical injury, and, the other, moral courage, which is overcoming the fear of emotional ha... |
racism | Although Atticus is hesitant to pull the trigger, he carries through with the task for the safety of the neighbourhood and its residents. Harper Lee uses the dog itself as a symbol for the madness Atticus has to confront when he accepts Tom Robinson’s case. The majority of Maycomb County is against Atticus and his will... |
racism | Both killing Tim Johnson and defending Tom Robinson scare Atticus, each for different reasons. And while Atticus shooting Tim Johnson shows Atticus overcoming the fear of physical injury, by Lee’s use of symbolism, it can be translated into him overcoming the fear of emotional harm and rejection of others by his standi... |
racism | The idea of an ‘outsider’ is a rather common concept within literature, and such a strong opposition from other characters, dooms Othello to be a permanent outsider, consequently making him a tragic figure. Iago maliciously uses zoomorphism in order to describe Othello as a ‘black ram’ and paradoxically compares him to... |
racism | Due to the fact that a Jacobean audience would acknowledge the aggressive creature that is a ‘ram’, as a position below that of humanity in the Great Chain of Being, Shakespeare ensures to clearly underscore the idea that Othello is lesser, therefore outlining him as creature destined to be outlawed. Through this parti... |
racism | Othello is therefore not only presented as an outsider, but as someone who is demonic, which at the time the play was written and performed, was a very serious accusation. Characters within the play, very easily express their discriminatory opinions on Othello, as they successfully aim to single him out, allowing an au... |
racism | Barthelemy notes that the ‘overwhelming majority’ of black characters presented on stage ‘between 1589 and 1695 endorsed, represented, or were evil’ which withholds truth when comparing Othello to other texts containing ‘The Moor’ written during this time period such as George Peel’s ‘Battle of Alcazar’ (1954). Peel pr... |
racism | I identify as a Jordanian Sunni Muslim. I am a second generation Jordanian American. While I was born and raised in America for the most part, I still identify as Jordanian. I identify myself this way because my entire family aside from my mother, father, and brother live in Jordan. |
racism | For starters, the whole “terrorist” spiel was very prominent growing up. Other kids thought calling me a terrorist was the funniest thing ever. Even today the misconception that all Muslims or Middle Eastern people are all terrorists is still very much alive. I think that living in Trump’s America has a lot to do with ... |
racism | I think that they need to know that they just need to learn about the Middle East as a whole. While many believe the Middle East is just one big place that is not true. There are many countries in what people call the middle east and each country has unique religions and customs. It would be great to have social worker... |
racism | I realized I was asexual my junior year of highschool. I realized it when my friends kept pushing me to be in a relationship and I went along with it and had multiple boyfriends but I never had any interest in these relationships. Don’t get me wrong, they were all great guys and i’m still friends with most of them but ... |
racism | Asexuality is a sexual orientation, like homosexuality or heterosexuality. And like being straight or being gay, it’s about what someone feels, not what someone does. Being asexual means I don’t have any interest in expressing my attraction physically. For me being asexual means that I don’t express myself physically e... |
racism | All my friends in Los Angeles and back home know. I’m sure others know as well, because as you know in small cities like ours things that don’t conform to gender norms spread like wildfire, but that doesn’t bother me. My parents and brother know as well but none of my family back in Jordan know. I decided not to tell t... |
racism | I was hoping to write a literature review on Jordanian women in America. Unfortunately, there have not been many studies done on Jordanian woman in America and because of this I have chosen to focus on Arab women as a whole. I was also hoping to focus on asexuality in the Middle Eastern community but there is also a sc... |
racism | While many Arabs express wariness and anxiety about aspects of their lives in the United States, Arab women tend to be more pessimistic about their place in U.S. society than Arab men. (Green) In America more Arab women than men say it has become more difficult to be Muslim in the U.S. in recent years. (US Muslims, 201... |
racism | Gendered racism is a form of racism oppression that takes place for no other reason than the race and gender of the victim. Gendered racism occurs because of the perceived thoughts and stereotypes around a certain gender and race. Gendered racism also encompasses what is known as “double jeopardy”. . Double Jeopardy is... |
racism | There needs to be significantly more research done when it comes to the middle eastern population as a whole. I believe that researchers should focus on the women from these countries because the amount of research done on them is almost non existent. More scholarly articles should be written about gendered racism beca... |
racism | The literature review above dives into the different social, racial, and gender factors that go into being an Arab. I wanted to focus more on the specifics of my interviewee which would have been Jordanian and Asexual but unfortuanatly there has not been alot of research done on these topics at all. While I found sourc... |
racism | Despite these challenges, I was able to form a thorough body of work. This body of work touches on being a Middle Eastern women in america and how different factors one of which being sexuality play a part in your everyday life. I tied all of these ideas together because of the things my interviewee said. As an asexual... |
racism | Overall, I think that social workers would benefit significantly by trying to learn more about different countries and people in the Middle East. Although there is not much information in terms of Arabs in the United States there is plenty to learn about different customs and beliefs among this diverse group of people ... |
racism | In regards to Asexuality I believe that social workers first of all need to learn what asexuality is. Asexuality is not very talked about or even known about and I believe that if a social worker knew exactly what asexuality was when talking to someone it would make that person feel more comfortable. I also think that ... |
racism | Colorism is an issue among African Americans and many other ethnic groups that have been ‘colonized’ that is slowly disunifying there cultures. Along with every other ethnic group in the United States, colorism has been passed down generation after generation and this shows how systematic it is. Colorism is prejudice o... |
racism | Colorism has mainly one cause and that is slavery even though colonization is considered almost the same but in a different country and taking control over it. Likewise, slavery has impacted African Americans mentally and systemically in many negative ways. Colorism is like racism only worse, people are mainly against ... |
racism | Light skin is considered better (above) than those of dark skin, but this is all due to slavery because slave owners only really gave special treatment to slaves with fairer/lighter skin complexions. This then led slave owners offering them with better opportunities. Even though most slave owners didn’t acknowledge the... |
racism | An effect of Colorism is the ‘Ideal European beauty standard’ which is also what can give people of other ethnic backgrounds insecurity. Some people (women) have been told ‘you look pretty for a dark skin girl’ this is nugatory it’s saying that being a person of dark skin can’t be pretty because of their skin complexio... |
racism | Another effect of Colorism is that sometimes due to the Ideal standard of beauty in society it can result in self-hatred and insecurity. There’s this idea that light skin is superior than darker skin likewise this is immensely rooted with slavery and the African American community. Majority of people must deal with col... |
racism | products. Many women and men from various ethnic backgrounds use these types of stuff to get their skin lighter cause there not happy with their self or how they look. So, colorism is solely based on skin color other things like eyes and certain feature would be considered featurism. People are taught colorism growing ... |
racism | Colorism is an issue amongst African Americans and many other ethnic groups that have been ‘colonized’ and it’s gradually disintegrating their cultures in many ways. Along with every other ethnic group in the United States, colorism has been passed down generation after generation and this shows how systematic it is. C... |
racism | Google defines the word race as a competition or a water channel, yet however, in the Oxford Learners Dictionary the word race is classified as the main groups that humans can be divided into according to their physical differences, for example the colour of the skin. In society, we tend to confuse race with ethnicity,... |
racism | The destruction and lowering of one’s self to make one race more superior overall, whites, and the other to be inferior, blacks. Due to this constant need for the ‘alpha’ race, slavery was put into effect making the less superior races, to be treated less than human. With slavery the act of selling and belittling anoth... |
racism | Colonisation has played a big role in the effect of the division of the races in the fact that the colonial powers dominated, oppressed and even exploited the “subjects”. Colonialism was started as a competition for resources or survival of the fittest stated by Charles Darwin. colonialism was a step – backwards for hu... |
racism | Race is also tied with the slave trade that took place approximately in 1526 to 1827, capturing slaves from Africa and shipping them off to the Americas. History Now states that the Atlantic Slave Trade ‘was the costliest in human life’. The Atlantic Triangular Slave Trade was created by the European colonist so that t... |
racism | When reading the book, I learned how many books could really change a person’s course of life. Malcolm never went to high school or university, yet he is known to be one of the 20th century’s most learned men. “So Malcolm, what’s your alma mater? Malcolm responded, “My alma mater is books!” “People don’t realize how a ... |
racism | At a moment when discrimination and racism in America were widespread, black men who spoke against it were putting their lives in serious danger. Malcolm was one of the people who was not afraid to speak the truth as it was. He knew he was in danger, but he was still a soldier. |
racism | The bravery shocked some of the fellow African-Americans.”I’m for truth, no matter who tells it. I’m for justice, no matter who it’s for or against.” -Malcolm X. There was a part of his desire for equality that he was dubbed by some reporters, ‘ the worst black man in America. ‘ If someone doesn’t do the right thing, w... |
racism | Research shows that people love to stay in places of warmth. It extends to all this planet’s ears. Special people are those who are willing to abandon their social circles continuously. Do people believe in the same things that a decade ago they used to believe? Is your decision tainted by prejudice? Sometimes, no matt... |
racism | How do you feel about yourself? Do you think you’re superior to others? Often I deal with questions of self-esteem. Like when I feel like I don’t do much, like a big team victory on Saturday nights. In one of Malcolm’s famous speeches, he asked: “Why do you hate the colour of your skin?” “Why do you hate the texture of... |
racism | I agree with Malcolm X hustle throughout the autobiography. While Malcolm is giving up drinking, cigarettes, and violence while in jail, his background as an after-prison evangelist is close to his previous experience as a hustler. From his years as a hustler, Malcolm maintains experiences, skills and beliefs that supp... |
racism | Today we talked about race, gender, sexuality, and our differences between our classmates. During the discussion, things got heated and feelings were hurt. It was a tough topic to talk about but in this generation, this should be talked about in every institution. During the heated conversation, people in the class did... |
racism | No other literary work does so much for the Black reader to affirm our race’s essential dignity and humanity. While one might assume that such basic values would be granted in the modern era, it remains a nation in which social powers are continuously chipping from the legal system to the entertainment world. Neverthel... |
racism | Many people think that computer programs can’t favor one person or race over another which has been proven to only be half true. The computer itself isn’t really favoring one race over the other in this case whites over blacks. The people that designed the algorithm for a health program made the algorithm to favor whit... |
racism | The programs are used to prevent people from getting sicker and while using the program white people are getting healthier and black people are getting sicker. In some cases similar to this one people have to go searching for information for their studies. In this case the hospital handed the information out. |
racism | I think that racism is something that shouldn’t happen and I think that it is crazy that people in the healthcare system would compromise their oaths as healthcare providers to favor one race over another. I also don’t know if the program is really doing this or if there maybe isn’t enough data to show that really ther... |
racism | Dice stands for Design is Innovation Creativity and Energy conference. The theme of the competition this year was to make an aluminum folding chair. Ryan Player made “The Lazy Toddler” which took first place in the competition and Alexander Brossard took second. Hillary Clark is a teacher at TMCC and a past winner of D... |
racism | This article does go along with our class because it talks about the problem solving process. The competitors first have to identify the problem by getting the theme of the competition, then they prepare by making a design. The competitor would then try by making their design into a physical object. The reflecting part... |
racism | Racist laws have been abolished in the United States for decades. Before this semester, I thought that meant that racism had been abolished. I knew there were random racists that still made the news, but I had no idea of the extent that racism still exists in the United States today. In fact, even I have unconscious ra... |
racism | The first day I went to 8th and College Connections in the River Bend neighborhood of Des Moines, I found myself having thoughts I am not proud of. As I drove through the run-down streets of the predominantly Latino neighborhood, I was nervous. I often hear stories on the news about shootings or rapes in those types of... |
racism | I parked just twenty feet from the door, but before getting out of the car I looked all around me to make sure nobody was nearby. I then exited and locked the car and hurried in the doors of the old church 8th and College Connections is located in. I heard kids screaming from downstairs and wondered who would let their... |
racism | In the first class, I met a few men from Mexico, two women from Guatemala, and one woman from El Salvador. Throughout the class, I was impressed with how eager the students were to learn. Over the break, I had the opportunity to talk to the women from Guatemala and learned that I had stayed in a hotel near where they w... |
racism | I thought about how unfairly the media portrays immigrants (especially Latinos and Middle Eastern people) and connected their inequality to class. In an article by John Greenberg, I learned that a reporter from Iowa City covered two stories of burglary, but in one three white men are shown in their suits and in the oth... |
racism | Outside of the media, I worry about the inequalities the students from 8th and College Connections might face. Many of them do not have a lot of money, but are more than capable of making a difference in the world. They are all intelligent, but they do not get a fair chance to show it. For example, the world’s poor, in... |
racism | Even if they do get a good education, Latinos and other people of color may not have the chance to use it because it is much harder for them to get a job. In the film White Privilege 101, two friends with the same credentials applied for the same position at a company. The black friend had a good interview, but was tol... |
racism | While poor education and unfair job interviews are just a few examples of inequality, I now know that there is a much broader cause of continuing inequality: the systems put in place within society. Farmer notes that ‘Rights violations are, rather, symptoms of deeper pathologies of power and are linked intimately to th... |
racism | On the opposite end of the spectrum of racism, I am able to enjoy the benefits of white privilege. Peggy McIntosh describes many examples of white privilege. The fact that ‘I can go home from most meetings of organizations I belong to feeling somewhat tied in, rather than isolated, out-of-place, outnumbered, unheard, h... |
racism | Despite the fact that I did not create these inequalities, I feel guilty about them. However, because of my privilege, I can definitely work to make sure I do not contribute to them and instead lessen them. Unfortunately, changing social norms is very difficult; they do not change overnight. However, through this class... |
racism | While nonviolence is effective for social change, it takes a strong will to commit to nonviolence. Currently, my mind would not be prepared to continue acting with grace despite the harsh words or physical violence I would face. To have any hope of making social change, it is necessary to find or train a group of peopl... |
racism | In the future, I hope to help end the blatant bias towards immigrants of color. Now that I am aware of the inequalities they face, I notice them often. Currently, I am most upset about how our president treats people of color. He has tried to prohibit people from the Middle East from entering the country and has declar... |
racism | Kehinde Wiley have experienced racism himself when he was young because of his race (African-American). At a time when he started doing this type of artworks young black men are constantly vilified in the press and mainstream media, and even murdered on the street by racist policemen, Wiley’s portraits are an essential... |
racism | The facial expression are clearly drawn, so my attention is starightly drawn towards the facial expression of the model. He is chin up which may show confidence. The vibrant colour in the background is significantly contrasting together with the skin colour of the model which again draw the viewer’s attention on the ex... |
racism | Frida Kahlo is well-known for using symbolism such as animals to show the deeper meaning of the artwork. I think that the use of the black monkey, black bird, thorn necklace and the black cat in this piece symbolizes the dark past (physically and psychologically) that she have experienced. The tw butterfly on her head ... |
racism | Magdalena Carmen Frieda Kahlo y Calder?n known as Frida Kahlo is a mexican self portrait painter born on July 6, 1907, in Coyoac?n, Mexico City, Mexico and was married to Diego Rivera and is still admired as a feminist icon. She began painting self portraits after she was severely injured in a bus accident. |
racism | Frida painted in 3 different styles and they were; Magic Realism, a way to paint in a greatly realistic style to show imaginary scenes or images. Surrealism. A 20th century style of art and literature. Modern Art, a style to show the Vilceks love for the art of the country. Her subject matter wasn’t like others; landsc... |
racism | Kahlo claimed to be born in the year 1910, the year of the outbreak of the Mexican revolution as she wanted to start her life on the new/modern Mexico. This information is characterized since childhood by a deep sense of independence and rebellion against social and moral ordinary habits, moved by passion and sensualit... |
racism | Drawing on her personal experiences (her troubled marriage, her painful miscarriages, her numerous operations), her works are often shocking in their stark portrayal of pain. Fifty-five of her 143 paintings are self-portraits, often incorporating symbolic portrayal of her physical and psychological wounds. Another them... |
racism | Analysis: The Broken Column shows a crying Frida, half naked, with tears in her eyes. Her body is covered with nailess and her body is open, this shows that her physical and psychological struggles are visible through the distortions of her body, which is fragmented, doubled, turned inside-out, and merged with non huma... |
racism | Analysis: Frida Kahlo put so many symbolic creatures in this painting. She was not painting a realistic scene but using these symbolic elements to express her feelings. A bird butterfly is often symbolize freedom and life and its beauty. The humming bird is Always actively seeking the sweetest nectar, they remind us to... |
racism | Wiley’s work falls into the category of Identity Politics, which is art, film, and writing, which deals primarily with aspects of the artist’s identity, for example race, gender, and sexuality. It is vitally important to Wiley that black people, especially black American men, are both the subjects and the audience of h... |
racism | His work is closely related to culture and life. Most of his photo look ‘American hood like’ this suggests that he must have been related to this type of lifestyle.The models he uses are normally dressed in their everyday clothes, which brings out the originality a lot. They wear urban street style clothes. Kehinde use... |
racism | Kehinde Wiley was born in 1977. He is a New York based portrait painter, with a Los Angeles native. He is mostly known for his highly realistic paintings of brown skinned people in quite heroic, regal like poses. He is known to be a racist, critics say this because the paintings he does where once a powerful white man,... |
racism | Analysis: This portrait is typical of Wiley’s work, featuring a young black male subject depicted against an ornate background. However, this work also acts as an example of how Wiley responds “site-specifically” to different geographical locations. This portrait was completed in Brazil, and instead of his typical Roco... |
racism | Howard Zinn- was an American historian, author, playwright, and social activist. He was a political science professor at Boston University. Zinn described himself as “something of an anarchist, something of asocialist. Maybe a democratic socialist.” He wrote extensively about the civil rights and anti-war movements, an... |
racism | I will try not to overlook the cruelties that victims inflict on one another as they are jammed together in the boxcars of the system. I don’t want to romanticize them. But I do remember (in rough paraphrase) a statement I once read: “The cry of the poor is not always just, but if you don’t listen to it, you will never... |
racism | If history is to be creative, to anticipate a possible future without denying the past, it should, I believe, emphasize new possibilities by disclosing those hidden episodes of the past when, even if in brief flashes, people showed their ability to resist, to join together, occasionally to win. I am supposing, or perha... |
racism | The writer’s approach is narrative and at the same time descriptive. Basically, the author wrote this book in great shape and emotionally driven. He wrote the account with critics and analysis in the political and cultural dynamics of the state on how the writers of history able to manifest the idea of “common cost” pr... |
racism | the author talked about Columbus, the Indians, and Human Progress, where he discussed the coming of Columbus when he first set foot to the continent and how the natives looked like during the pre-colonial age as he descriptively narrate the physical attributes of the natives, their appearances, their own customs before... |
racism | “Was all this bloodshed and deceit-from Columbus to Cortes, Pi- zarro, the Puritans-a necessity for the human race to progress from savagery to civilization? Was Morison right in burying the story of genocide inside a more important story of human progress? Perhaps a persuasive argument can be made-as it was made by St... |
racism | If there are necessary sacrifices to be made for human progress, is it not essential to hold to the principle that those to be sacrificed must make the decision themselves? We can all decide to give up some- thing of ours, but do we have the right to throw into the pyre the children of others, or even our own children,... |
racism | Drawing the Color Line, basically suggest and provoke the hostile living conditions of slaves, black and white under different level of circumstances. It also explained as why slavery prevailed despite rebellious acts countering brutality and unjustness among the slaves. Howard Zinn, noted how the masters could economi... |
racism | Howard Zinn emphasizes the people’s condition, and its state. The author discussed how the people were treated from the newly founded colonies, the struggle of the mass from the hostility and animosity. He jotted down the poor condition of the people from enslavement, how it was very common for a slave to be beaten and... |
racism | this chapter presents the outcome of slavery and hostilities to the English colonist where it mounted a deep regional sentiment to a common goal, to outcast the English throne from entangling the natives from oppression and suppression. In this chapter, the author enumerated the early uprisings and revolts and later ho... |
racism | the chapter presents the internal struggle for mobilization, where the mass was divided into committing themselves and fight for the cost of revolution or to exclude themselves from a great danger, some stayed neutral. According to Howard Zinn, conflicts have arose before their common enemy, recruitments for militias h... |
racism | basically talks about the history’s long been denied regard for the women on its role and importance in the society. The author discussed the different characteristics of women from one state to another. He contested the depiction of the society’s common knowledge about women, which were so called child bearers and sex... |
racism | entitled “As Long as Grass Grows or Water Runs” it presents the idea of a bloody integration to a hope it could’ve been modified to a little extent. However, Howard Zinn pointed out the lapses of those revered American heroes for the outcome, how these leaders even initiated the marginalization casting out the native I... |
racism | Thank God”, it presents the gradual expansion of United States to the extent of waging war from Mexico which then became known as the Mexican-American War, that have driven with political aggression bombarded with its idea of “manifest destiny” which again to conquer and expand. The war had provoked factional ideas and... |
racism | “The determination of our slaveholding President to prosecute the war, and the probability of his success in wringing from the people men and money to carry it on, is made evident, rather than doubtful, by the puny opposition arrayed against him. No politician of any considerable distinction or eminence seems willing t... |
racism | in this chapter entitled “Slavery Without Submission, Emancipation Without Freedom”, as stated on its first line, the author wrote “The United States government’s support of slavery was based on an overpowering practicality.” Thus· it would take either a full-scale slave rebellion or a full-scale war to end such a deep... |
racism | As Howard stated, “with slavery abolished by order of the government-true, a government pushed hard to do so, by blacks, free and slave, and by white abolitionists-its end could be orchestrated so as to set limits to emanci- pation. Liberation from the top would go only so far as the interests of the dominant groups pe... |
racism | it talks about the resistance due to the prevalence of growing inequalities in United States, legislations that was heavily carried by the oppressed citizens, the tenants. These bills were countered by Anti-rent movement and basically defeated and rejected. Allowing the birth of civil conflicts that have led to inevita... |
racism | this chapter presents the crucial truth behind the 19th century’s growth and development lays the bearer of burden, the poor which robbed and robbed by the elites or the upper class on the extent of exploitation. As Howard noted that United States is becoming a capitalist, hence lower class being exploited yet propagat... |
racism | in this chapter, it talks about United States as an emerging superpower that extends its venture from conquering and acquiring new lands. How they prompted aggression to these nations and enacted policy of intimidation. In this chapter the author discussed how United States developed a false platform of recognizing ind... |
racism | “And would not a foreign adventure deflect some of the rebellious energy that went into strikes and protest movements toward an external enemy? Would it not unite people with government, with the armed forces, instead of against them? This was probably not a conscious plan among most of the elite-but a natural developm... |
racism | the 13th chapter talks about the “The Socialist Challenge” basically, this chapter talks about the early 20th century, where the number of strikes was growing at a startling rate. An increasing number of moderate and middle-class people were embracing the idea that capitalists exerted too much power over the country. A... |
racism | this chapter presents “War Is the Health of the State”, “War is the health of the state.” As the radical writer Randolph Bourne said, in the midst of the First World War. In United States, at the height of the World War I, socialism was growing, an opposition from a capitalist state. In this chapter, Howard discussed a... |
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