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Explores Jackie Robinson’s compelling and complicated legacy Before the United States Supreme Court ruled against segregation in public schools, and before Rosa Parks refused to surrender her bus seat in Montgomery, Alabama, Jackie Robinson walked onto the diamond on April 15, 1947, as first baseman for the Brooklyn Dodgers, making history as the first African American to integrate Major League Baseball in the twentieth century. Today a national icon, Robinson was a complicated man who navigated an even more complicated world that both celebrated and despised him. Many are familiar with Robinson as a baseball hero. Few, however, know of the inner turmoil that came with his historic status. Featuring piercing essays from a range of distinguished sportswriters, cultural critics, and scholars, this book explores Robinson’s perspectives and legacies on civil rights, sports, faith, youth, and nonviolence, while providing rare glimpses into the struggles and strength of one of the nation’s most athletically gifted and politically significant citizens. Featuring a foreword by celebrated directors and producers Ken Burns, Sarah Burns, and David McMahon, this volume recasts Jackie Robinson’s legacy and establishes how he set a precedent for future civil rights activism, from Black Lives Matter to Colin Kaepernick.
Explores Jackie Robinson's compelling and complicated legacy Before the United States Supreme Court ruled against segregation in public schools, and before Rosa Parks refused to surrender her bus seat in Montgomery, Alabama, Jackie Robinson walked onto the diamond on April 15, 1947, as first baseman for the Brooklyn Dodgers, making history as the first African American to integrate Major League Baseball in the twentieth century. Today a national icon, Robinson was a complicated man who navigated an even more complicated world that both celebrated and despised him. Many are familiar with Robinson as a baseball hero. Few, however, know of the inner turmoil that came with his historic status. Featuring piercing essays from a range of distinguished sportswriters, cultural critics, and scholars, this book explores Robinson's perspectives and legacies on civil rights, sports, faith, youth, and nonviolence, while providing rare glimpses into the struggles and strength of one of the nation's most athletically gifted and politically significant citizens. Featuring a foreword by celebrated directors and producers Ken Burns, Sarah Burns, and David McMahon, this volume recasts Jackie Robinson's legacy and establishes how he set a precedent for future civil rights activism, from Black Lives Matter to Colin Kaepernick.
There is no more powerful, detested, misunderstood African
American in our public life than Clarence Thomas. "Supreme
Discomfort: The Divided Soul of Clarence Thomas" is a haunting
portrait of an isolated and complex man, savagely reviled by much
of the black community, not entirely comfortable in white society,
internally wounded by his passage from a broken family and rural
poverty in Georgia, to elite educational institutions, to the
pinnacle of judicial power. His staunchly conservative positions on
crime, abortion, and, especially, affirmative action have exposed
him to charges of heartlessness and hypocrisy, in that he is
himself the product of a broken home who manifestly benefited from
racially conscious admissions policies.
Over the last 100 years, perhaps no segment of the American
population has been more analyzed than black males. The subject of
myriad studies and dozens of government boards and commissions,
black men have been variously depicted as the progenitors of pop
culture and the menaces of society, their individuality often
obscured by the narrow images that linger in the public mind. Ten
years after the Million Man March, the largest gathering of black
men in the nation's history, "Washington Post" staffers began
meeting to discuss what had become of black men in the ensuing
decade. How could their progress and failures be measured?
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The Lie Of 1652 - A Decolonised History…
Patric Tariq Mellet
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