Results for ' U.S. black athletes'

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  1.  32
    Why player political protest should be part of U.S. professional sports.Lou Matz - 2024 - Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 51 (3):423-438.
    ABSTRACT‘Sports and politics don’t mix’. This platitude has been a pervasive part of U.S. professional sport culture, but it is vague and most of the versions are untrue since politics have been, and must be, a part of professional sports. Its only plausible meaning is that professional players should not make political statements while they are on-the-job. Players have a constitutional right to make political statements outside the workplace, but this right does not apply in privately owned sport associations. I (...)
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  2.  57
    Tracking U.S. Professional Athletes: The Ethics of Biometric Technologies.Katrina Karkazis & Jennifer R. Fishman - 2017 - American Journal of Bioethics 17 (1):45-60.
    Professional sport in the United States has widely adopted biometric technologies, dramatically expanding the monitoring of players’ biodata. These technologies have the potential to prevent injuries, improve performance, and extend athletes’ careers; they also risk compromising players’ privacy and autonomy, the confidentiality of their data, and their careers. The use of these technologies in professional sport and the consumer sector remains largely unregulated and unexamined. We seek to provide guidance for their adoption by examining five areas of concern: validity (...)
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  3.  18
    Black American History and Culture: Untold, Reframed, Stigmatized and Fetishized to the Point of Global Ethnocide.K. Spotts - 2023 - European Journal of Philosophy Culture and Religion 7 (1):1-41.
    Purpose: A poetic work of fiction haunts the base of the Statue of Liberty. The act overshadowed the original tribute to the Civil War victory and the Emancipation Proclamation. Abraham Lincoln's praises of the Black American military fell silent. Eurocentrists shrouded centuries of genius and scaled-down Black American mastery. Sagas of barrier-breaking Olympians, military heroes, Wild West pioneers, and inventors ended as forgotten footnotes. Today, countries around the world fetishize Black American history and culture to the point (...)
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  4.  48
    Flaws in the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's Rationale for Supporting the Development and Approval of BiDil as a Treatment for Heart Failure Only in Black Patients.George T. H. Ellison, Jay S. Kaufman, Rosemary F. Head, Paul A. Martin & Jonathan D. Kahn - 2008 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 36 (3):449-457.
    The U.S. Food and Drug Administration's rationale for supporting the development and approval of BiDil for heart failure specifically in black patients was based on under-powered, post hoc subgroup analyses of two relatively old trials , which were further complicated by substantial covariate imbalances between racial groups. Indeed, the only statistically significant difference observed between black and white patients was found without any adjustment for potential confounders in samples that were unlikely to have been adequately randomized. Meanwhile, because (...)
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  5. Black Lives Matter and the Paradoxes of U.S. Black Politics.Juliet Hooker - 2016 - Political Theory 44 (4):448-469.
    This essay seeks to understand the complex response to the current Black Lives Matter protests against police violence, which pose deeper questions about the forms of politics that black citizens—who are experiencing a defining moment of racial terror in the United States in the twenty-first century—can and should pursue. When other citizens and state institutions betray a lack of care and concern for black suffering, which in turn makes it impossible for those wrongs to be redressed, is (...)
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  6.  33
    Double Effect and U.S. Supreme Court Reasoning.Lisa Gasbarre Black - 2011 - The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 11 (1):41-48.
    Legal minds have utilized the principle of double effect as proposed by St. Thomas Aquinas for centuries to shape legal authority in cases where moral judgment and legal reasoning meet. The U.S. Supreme Court had uti­lized double-effect reasoning in the realm of self-defense cases. This article discusses more recent use of double-effect reasoning in the landmark Supreme Court case Vacco v. Quill and its companion case, Washington v. Glucksberg. Chief Justice William Rehnquist, writing for the Court in Vacco, introduced double-effect (...)
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  7.  29
    James Cone’s Black-Power Hermeneutics.Josiah U. Young - 2019 - CLR James Journal 25 (1):237-248.
  8.  25
    Children Sold for Transplants: medical and legal aspects.U. Fasting, J. Christensen & S. Glending - 1998 - Nursing Ethics 5 (6):518-526.
    Over the last few decades there has been a substantially higher percentage of successful organ transplants but also a significant imbalance between the demand for and the supply of organs, creating the basis for a highly profitable black market trade in human organs. Sometimes there are reports that children have been kidnapped, only to reappear later lacking one kidney, or that they simply disappear and are subsequently killed to have all their transplantable organs removed for profit. The European Union (...)
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  9.  13
    U.S. moral theology from the margins.Charles E. Curran & Lisa Fullam (eds.) - 2020 - Mahwah, New Jersey: Paulist Press.
    Memory, funerals, and the communion of the saints: growing old and practices of remembering / M. Therese Lysaught -- God bends over backward to accommodate humankind...while the Civil Rights Acts and the Americans with Disabilities Act require [only] minimum effort / Mary Jo Iozzio -- Radical solidarity: migration as challenge ofr contemporary Christian ethics / Kristin E. Heyer -- Catholic lesbian feminist theology / Mary E. Hunt -- Theology of whose body? Sexual conplementarity, intersex conditions, and La Virgen de Guadalupe (...)
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  10.  34
    White Privilege and Black Rights: The Injustice of U.S. Police Racial Profiling and Homicide.Naomi Zack - 2015 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    Examining racial profiling in American policing, Naomi Zack argues against white privilege discourse while introducing a new theory of applicative justice. Deepening understanding without abandoning hope, Zack shows why it is more important to consider black rights than white privilege as we move forward through today's culture of inequality.
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  11. "You Ain't Gonna Get Away Wit' This, Django": Fantasy, Fiction and Subversion in Quentin Tarantino's, Django Unchained.Jack Black - 2019 - Quarterly Review of Film and Video 36 (7):611-637.
    From 2009 to 2015, U.S. director, Quentin Tarantino, released three films that were notable for their focus on particular historical events, periods and individuals (Inglorious Basterds 2009; Django Unchained 2012; The Hateful Eight 2015). Together, these films offered a specifically “Tarantinian” rendering of history: rewriting, manipulating and, for some, unethically deploying history for aesthetic effect. With regard to Django Unchained, this article examines how Tarantino’s historical revisionism provides a valuable point of inquiry into the ways in which “history” is depicted (...)
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  12.  6
    Book Review: Qualifying Times: Points of Change in U.S. Women’s Sport by Jamie Schultz and A Locker Room of Her Own: Celebrity, Sexuality, and Female Athletes edited by David C. Ogden and Joel Nathan Rose. [REVIEW]Cheryl Cooky - 2016 - Gender and Society 30 (1):136-139.
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  13.  9
    Black American Students in an Affluent Suburb: A Study of Academic Disengagement.John U. Ogbu - 2003 - Routledge.
    John Ogbu has studied minority education from a comparative perspective for over 30 years. The study reported in this book--jointly sponsored by the community and the school district in Shaker Heights, Ohio--focuses on the academic performance of Black American students. Not only do these students perform less well than White students at every social class level, but also less well than immigrant minority students, including Black immigrant students. Furthermore, both middle-class Black students in suburban school districts, as (...)
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  14.  14
    (1 other version)Black Market Technology in the U.S.S.R.: or, The Peasants' Art of Starving.L. Timofeev - 1982 - Télos 1982 (51):5-21.
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  15.  16
    Equity or Essentialism?: U.S. Courts and the Legitimation of Girls’ Teams in High School Sport.Kimberly Kelly & Adam Love - 2011 - Gender and Society 25 (2):227-249.
    Feminist scholars have critically analyzed the effects of sex segregation in numerous social institutions, yet sex-segregated sport often remains unchallenged. Even critics of sex-segregated sport have tended to accept the merits of women-only teams at face value. In this article, we revisit this issue by examining the underlying assumptions supporting women’s and girls’ teams and explore how they perpetuate gender inequality. Specifically, we analyze the 14 U.S. court cases wherein adolescent boys have sought to play on girls’ teams in their (...)
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  16. U.S. is haven for carpetbagging sports owners.Jacub Frankowicz - 2019 - In Marty Gitlin (ed.), Athletes, ethics, and morality. New York: Greenhaven Publishing.
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  17.  18
    Castles: A History and Guide. Special consultant: R. Allen Brown; main contributors: Michael Prestwich and Charles Coulson. Poole, Dorset, Eng.: Blandford Press, 1980. Pp. 192; over 200 photographs in color and black-and-white, detailed cutaway diagrams and drawings. $19.95. Distributed in the U.S. by Sterling, 2 Park Ave., New York, NY 10016. [REVIEW]John Beeler - 1982 - Speculum 57 (4):963-964.
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  18.  14
    Ken Dark, ed., Secular Buildings and the Archaeology of Everyday Life in the Byzantine Empire. Oxford: Oxbow Books, 2004. Paper. Pp. iii, 132; black-and-white figures. Distributed in the U.S. by the David Brown Book Company, P.O. Box 511, Oakville, CT 06779. [REVIEW]Amy Papalexandrou - 2006 - Speculum 81 (4):1178-1180.
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  19.  28
    Elizabeth L'Estrange, Holy Motherhood: Gender, Dynasty and Visual Culture in the Later Middle Ages. Manchester, Eng., and New York: Manchester University Press, 2008. Pp. xxi, 282 plus 16 color plates; 52 black-and-white figures and genealogical tables. $84. Distributed in the U.S. by Palgrave, 175 Fifth Ave., New York, NY 10010. [REVIEW]Martha Easton - 2010 - Speculum 85 (3):703-705.
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  20.  30
    Margins of Precision: Essays in Logic and Language. By Max Black. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1970. Pp. 277. $7.50 U.S. [REVIEW]Richmond Campbell - 1971 - Dialogue 10 (4):805-808.
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  21.  37
    Michael Hicks, Edward IV. (Reputations.) London: Hodder Arnold, 2004. Pp. xiii, 273; 3 genealogical tables. Distributed in the U.S. by Oxford University Press Inc., 198 Madison Ave., New York, NY 10016.Arlene Okerlund, Elizabeth Wydeville: The Slandered Queen. (England's Forgotten Queens.) Stroud, Eng.: Tempus, 2005. Pp. 319 plus 23 black-and-white plates; genealogical tables and maps. [REVIEW]Michael Jones - 2006 - Speculum 81 (4):1207-1209.
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  22.  22
    Translating Cultural Safety to the UK.Amali U. Lokugamage, Elizabeth Rix, Tania Fleming, Tanvi Khetan, Alice Meredith & Carolyn Ruth Hastie - 2023 - Journal of Medical Ethics 49 (4):244-251.
    Disproportional morbidity and mortality experienced by ethnic minorities in the UK have been highlighted by the COVID-19 pandemic. The ‘Black Lives Matter’ movement has exposed structural racism’s contribution to these health inequities. ‘Cultural Safety’, an antiracist, decolonising and educational innovation originating in New Zealand, has been adopted in Australia. Cultural Safety aims to dismantle barriers faced by colonised Indigenous peoples in mainstream healthcare by addressing systemic racism.This paper explores what it means to be ‘culturally safe’. The ways in which (...)
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  23.  23
    Sister M. Amelia Klenke, O.P., Chrétien de Troyes and “Le conte del Graal”: A Study of Sources and Symbolism. Madrid: José Purrúa Turanzas, 1981. Paper. Pp. xvii, 92; 4 black-and-white illustrations. Distributed in U.S.A. by Studia Humanitatis, 1383 Kersey Lane, Potomac, MD 20854. [REVIEW]Per Nykrog - 1983 - Speculum 58 (2):556.
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  24.  9
    Supporting Poor Single Mothers: Gender and Race in the U.S. Welfare State.Stephanie Moller - 2002 - Gender and Society 16 (4):465-484.
    This article examines the uneven welfare support accorded to Black and white women at the end of the twentieth century. The author analyzes the generosity of Aid to Families with Dependent Children benefits in the 48 contiguous U.S. states in 1970, 1980, and 1990 to determine if the state is less supportive of Black than white women. The author argues that the race-biased policies and procedures implemented with the inception and expansion of the welfare state remained throughout the (...)
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  25. Watch Your Language: A Review of the Use of Stigmatizing Language by Canadian Judges. [REVIEW]Michelle Black & Jocelyn Downie - 2010 - Journal of Ethics in Mental Health 5:1-5.
    E-therapy is fast becoming an inevitable addition to counseling due to the increased use and accessibility, the internet and advances in e-therapy technology in the U.S. With the growth of any method of treatment, awareness of ethical concerns regarding best practices is a necessity. E-therapy has unqiue ethical challenges that mental health professionals should be aware of when utilizing computer mediated counseling. Specifi cally, there are fi ve common ethical concerns of on-line counseling that should be addressed during the informed (...)
     
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  26.  21
    Black and Buddhist: What Buddhism Can Teach Us About Race, Resilience, Transformation, and Freedom ed. by Pamela Ayo Yetunde and Cheryl Giles, and: Buddhist-Christian Dialogue, U.S. Law, and Womanist Theology for Transgender Spiritual Care by Pamela Ayo Yetunde. [REVIEW]Carolyn Jones Medine - 2021 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 41 (1):327-337.
  27.  68
    The Problem of African American Public (s): Dewey and African American Politics in the 21st Century.Eddie S. Glaude - 2010 - Contemporary Pragmatism 7 (1):9-29.
    Dewey's account of the eclipse of publics in The Public and Its Problems has special relevance to the contemporary challenges of post-soul politics. The civil rights movement has transformed social conditions, so that continued uncritical reference to it as a framework for black political activity blocks the way to innovative thinking about African American politics. Conceptions of community that have informed African-American politics in the past have given way to a fractured and fragmented public unable to identify itself. I (...)
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  28.  51
    Darwin's Athletes: How Sport Has Damaged Black America and Preserved the Myth of Race.John Valentine - 1999 - Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 26 (1):105-112.
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  29.  32
    Rosamund Allen, ed., Eastward Bound: Travel and Travellers, 1050–1550. Manchester, Eng., and New York: Manchester University Press, 2004. Pp. xv, 270; black-and-white frontispiece and 12 black-and-white figures. Distributed in the U.S. by Palgrave, 175 Fifth Ave., New York, NY 10010. [REVIEW]John Tolan - 2006 - Speculum 81 (2):466-467.
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  30.  4
    The Dividends of Democracy’s Destruction: Surplus, Ideology, and Militarism in the Turn to Empire in Du Bois’s Black Reconstruction.Inés Valdez - 2024 - The Monist 107 (1):57-68.
    This paper offers an original reading of Du Bois’s Black Reconstruction that highlights how the knock down effects from Reconstruction’s failures contributed to the U.S. imperial trajectory. The coalition between the industrial North, Southern landowners, and white workers ended the promise of racial emancipation advanced by Black freedmen and the Freedmen’s Bureau. The gains from the resubjection of Black freedmen and women; the development of a national identity based racial hierarchy and an attachment to material wealth, and (...)
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  31.  21
    Diversity in IRB Membership: Views of IRB Chairpersons at U.S. Universities and Academic Medical Centers.Sydney Churchill, Emily A. Largent, Elizabeth Taggert & Holly Fernandez Lynch - 2022 - AJOB Empirical Bioethics 13 (4):237-250.
    Background Diversity in Institutional Review Board (IRB) membership is important for both intrinsic and instrumental reasons, including fairness, promoting trust, improving decision quality, and responding to systemic racism. Yet U.S. IRBs remain racially and ethnically homogeneous, even as gender diversity has improved. Little is known about IRB chairpersons’ perspectives on membership diversity and barriers to increasing it, as well as current institutional efforts to promote diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) within IRB membership.Methods We surveyed IRB chairpersons leading U.S. boards registered (...)
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  32.  21
    J. S. Bothwell, Falling from Grace: Reversal of Fortune and the English Nobility, 1075–1455. Manchester, Eng., and New York: Manchester University Press, 2008. Pp. xv, 269; 15 black-and-white figures. $85. Distributed in the U.S. by Palgrave, 175 Fifth Ave., New York, NY 10010. [REVIEW]Michael Hicks - 2010 - Speculum 85 (4):939-941.
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  33. Zack, Naomi. White Privilege and Black Rights: The Injustice of U.S. Police Racial Profiling and Homicide.Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2015. Pp. 154. $45.00 ; $19.95. [REVIEW]Annabelle Lever - 2016 - Ethics 126 (4):1129-1134.
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  34.  53
    Research Challenges and Bioethics Responsibilities in the Aftermath of the Presidential Apology to the Survivors of the U. S. Public Health Services Syphilis Study at Tuskegee.Vickie M. Mays - 2012 - Ethics and Behavior 22 (6):419-430.
    In 1997 President Clinton apologized to the survivors of the U.S. Public Health Service Syphilis Study. Since then, two of his recommendations have received little attention. First, he emphasized the need to remember the shameful past so we can build a better future for racial'ethnic minority populations. Second, he directed the creation in partnership with higher education to prepare training materials that would instruct biomedical researchers on the application of ethical principles to research with racial/ethnic minority populations. This article proposes (...)
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  35. Truth and Reparation for the U.S. Imprisonment and Policing Regime: A Transitional Justice Perspective.Jennifer M. Https://Orcidorg Page & Desmond King - 2022 - Du Bois Review: Social Science Research on Race 19 (2):209–231.
    In the literature on transitional justice, there is disagreement about whether countries like the United States can be characterized as transitional societies. Though it is widely recognized that transitional justice mechanisms such as truth commissions and reparations can be used by Global North nations to address racial injustice, some consider societies to be transitional only when they are undergoing a formal democratic regime change. We conceptualize the political situation of low-income Black communities under the U.S. imprisonment and policing regime (...)
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  36.  20
    Greenhorns, Yankees, and Cosmopolitans: Venture Capital, IPOs, Foreign Firms, and U.S. Markets.Edward B. Rock - 2001 - Theoretical Inquiries in Law 2 (2).
    Black and Gilson have argued that “venture capital can flourish especially – and perhaps only – if the venture capitalist can exit from a successful portfolio company through an initial public offering, which requires an active stock market.” But nothing in the Black and Gilson analysis requires that the exit option be a domestic capital market. In this article, I use the phenomenon of Israeli hi-tech companies going public on the Nasdaq as a case study to explore the (...)
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  37.  30
    Signaling Parenthood: Managing the Motherhood Penalty and Fatherhood Premium in the U.S. Service Sector.Sigrid Luhr - 2020 - Gender and Society 34 (2):259-283.
    An extensive body of research documents that women experience a motherhood penalty at work whereas men experience a fatherhood premium. Yet much of this work presupposes that employers are aware of a worker’s parental status. Given the different consequences that parenthood has on outcomes such as pay and promotions, it is conceivable that men and women may deploy their status as parents differently when interacting with employers. Drawing on in-depth interviews with a racially diverse sample, this article examines how mothers (...)
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  38.  49
    Fritz S. Pedersen, ed. and trans., The Toledan Tables, 1: General Preface, Canons Ca; 2: Canons Cb, Canons Cc; 3: Preface to Tables; Tables, Types A–D; 4: Tables, Types E–U; Indices. Copenhagen: C. A. Reitzels, for the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters, 2002. 1: pp. 1–324; black-and-white figures and tables. 2: pp. 325–736; black-and-white figures and tables. 3: pp. 737–1240; tables. 4: pp. 1241–1662; tables. DKr 1,500. [REVIEW]José Chabás - 2004 - Speculum 79 (2):543-545.
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  39.  16
    Women’s Employment among Blacks, Whites, and Three Groups of Latinas: Do More Privileged Women Have Higher Employment?Mary Ross, Carmen Garcia-Beaulieu & Paula England - 2004 - Gender and Society 18 (4):494-509.
    During much of U.S. history, Black women had higher employment rates than white women. But by the late twentieth century, women in more privileged racial/ethnic, national origin, and education groups were more likely to work for pay. The authors compare the employment of white women to Blacks and three groups of Latinas—Mexicans, Cubans, and Puerto Ricans—and explain racial/ethnic group differences. White women work for pay more weeks per year than Latinas or Black women, although the gaps are small (...)
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  40.  14
    Diaspora History Construction and Slave Culture Formation on Small U.S. Plantations.Wilma A. Dunaway - 2004 - ProtoSociology 20:186-200.
    This analysis of enslavement in an American South subregion provides an historical microcosm for understanding the complexities of provincial culture formation in the modern world-system. Simultaneously rooted in multiple points of local and world-systemic origin, peoplehood is an historical product of the capitalist world-system. Despite widespread notions to the contrary, low black population density and geographical isolation did not forestall slave community building on small plantations. Despite extreme repression, slaves dialectically preserved and altered hidden transcripts in order to recapture (...)
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  41.  65
    Black Infinity: Slavery and Freedom in Hegel's Africa.Andrea Long Chu - 2018 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 32 (3):414-425.
    On February 21, 1860, on the eve of Southern secession, Lucius Quintus Cincinnatus Lamar II gave an impassioned speech in defense of American slavery on the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives. Nearing the climax of his argument, Lamar proposed to read from a book he described as “an imperishable monument of human genius.” According to this author, and here Lamar quoted at length, “The ‘natural condition’ itself is one of absolute and thorough injustice, contravention of the right and (...)
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  42.  16
    Black feminist sociology: perspectives and praxis.Zakiya Luna & Whitney Pirtle (eds.) - 2021 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    Black Feminist Sociology offers new writings by established and emerging scholars working in a Black feminist tradition. The book centers Black feminist sociology within the sociology canon and widens is to feature Black feminist sociologists both outside the U.S. and the academy. Inspired by a BFS lens, the essays are critical, personal, political and oriented toward social justice. Key themes include the origins of Black feminist sociology, expositions of BFS orientations to research that extend disciplinary (...)
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  43.  40
    The Shaping of a Canon: U.S. Fiction, 1960-1975.Richard Ohmann - 1983 - Critical Inquiry 10 (1):199-223.
    Categorical names such as “The English Novel,” “The Modern American Novel,” and “American Literature” often turn up in catalogs as titles of college courses, and we know from them pretty much what to expect. They also have standing in critical discourse, along with allied terms unlikely to serve as course titles: “good writing,” “great literature,” “serious fiction,” “literature” itself. The awareness has grown in recent years that such concepts pose problems, even though we use them with easy enough comprehension when (...)
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  44.  26
    Your blues ain't like mine: considering integrative antiracism in HIV prevention research with black men who have sex with men in C anada and the U nited S tates.LaRon E. Nelson, Ja'Nina J. Walker, Steve N. DuBois & Sulaimon Giwa - 2014 - Nursing Inquiry 21 (4):270-282.
    Evidence‐based interventions have been developed and used to prevent HIV infections among black men who have sex with men (MSM) in Canada and the United States; however, the degree to which interventions address racism and other interlocking oppressions that influence HIV vulnerability is not well known. We utilize integrative antiracism to guide a review of HIV prevention intervention studies with black MSM and to determine how racism and religious oppression are addressed in the current intervention evidence base. We (...)
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  45. Southern Black Women's Canebrake Gardens: Responding to Taylor's Call for Aesthetic Reconstruction.Joshua M. Hall - 2020 - Debates in Aesthetics 15 (2).
    In this response, I suggest that Black southern women in the U.S. have always been central to the “reconstruction” that Taylor identifies as a central theme of Black aesthetics. Building on his allusions to Alice Walker and Jean Toomer, I explore Walker’s tearful response (in In Search of Our Mothers’ Gardens: Womanist Prose (1983) to Toomer’s Cane (2011). Walker identifies their mothers’ and grandmothers’ informal arts of storytelling and gardening as the hidden roots of both her and Toomer’s (...)
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  46.  33
    Greek Athletics and the Olympics by Alan Beale, and: Thinking the Olympics: The Classical Tradition and the Modern Games ed. by Barbara Goff, Michael Simpson (review).Jacques A. Bromberg - 2013 - American Journal of Philology 134 (4):703-709.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Greek Athletics and the Olympics by Alan Beale, and: Thinking the Olympics: The Classical Tradition and the Modern Games ed. by Barbara Goff, Michael SimpsonJacques A. BrombergAlan Beale. Greek Athletics and the Olympics. Greece & Rome: Texts and Contexts. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2011. iv + 196 pp. Numerous color figs. Paper, $26.Barbara Goff and Michael Simpson, eds. Thinking the Olympics: The Classical Tradition and the Modern Games. (...)
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  47. What is the State of Blacks in Philosophy?Tina F. Botts, Liam K. Bright, Guntur Mallarangeng, Quayshawn Spencer & Myisha Cherry - 2014 - Critical Philosophy of Race 2 (2):224-242.
    This research note is meant to introduce into philosophical discussion the preliminary results of an empirical study on the state of blacks in philosophy, which is a joint effort of the American Philosophical Association’s Committee on the Status of Black Philosophers (APA CSBP) and the Society of Young Black Philosophers (SYBP). The study is intended to settle factual issues in furtherance of contributing to dialogues surrounding at least two philosophical questions: What, if anything, is the philosophical value of (...)
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  48.  45
    Black Hawk Down: Somali and US perspectives on the "Day of the Rangers".Gail M. Presbey - 2002 - Agenda.
    This article reviews, compares and contrasts the film "Black Hawk Down" by Ridley Scott, with the book by Marc Bowman. The book has a third of its contents devoted to the Somali experience of, and perspective on, the "Day of the Rangers," that is, the day that US troops were militarily involved in Mogadishu, Somalia (October 3, 1993). However, the film almost entirely conveys the U.S. servicemen's experience, with hardly any sympathetic Somali characters. I argue that many of Bowman's (...)
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  49.  16
    Casualties of exclusionary cultural policies: exploring the paradox of Black American cultural engagement.Antonio C. Cuyler - 2023 - Journal for Cultural Research 27 (1):23-37.
    Since their enslavement in the U. S. Black Americans have longitudinally suffered some of the most heinous crimes against humanity. Yet, despite cultural policies intended to discriminate against, marginalise, oppress, and subjugate them, Black folx have unfailingly demonstrated remarkable creative resilience. This conceptual article explores three research questions: (1) in what ways have exclusionary U. S. cultural policies discouraged Black Americans’ cultural engagement, (2) how have Black Americans responded to exclusionary cultural policies in the U. S. (...)
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    Anna U. Davis: An Introduction.Ellyn Weiss - 2020 - Feminist Studies 46 (1):108-127.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:108 Feminist Studies 46, no. 1. © 2020 by Feminist Studies, Inc. Ellyn Weiss Anna U. Davis: An Introduction Anna U. Davis is a Swedish American mixed-media artist who was born in Lund, Sweden, and currently resides in Washington, DC. Her work draws frequently on the challenges she has faced living in the United States, particularly those related to her gender and racial position. Her husband, who spent most (...)
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