Results 271 to 280 of about 183,056 (297)
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“Like an earthquake!” Theater television, boxing, and the black public sphere
Quarterly Review of Film and Video, 1997(1997). “Like an earthquake!” Theater television, boxing, and the black public sphere. Quarterly Review of Film and Video: Vol. 16, U.S. Regional and Non‐Network Television, pp. 307-323.
A. Mccarthy
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Oprah in South Africa: The Politics of Coevalness and the Creation of a Black Public Sphere
Safundi, 2007In a recent article, Tarisha L. Stanley asked the question: “Can a mammy be a mammy if she builds girls’ schools in Africa?”1 This simple question captures the complex range of issues raised by Opr...
Zine Magubane
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Antiquity, Tradition, and Anti-Blackness in Hannah Arendt's Public Sphere
TAPAsummary: Scholarship on Hannah Arendt's receptions of Greco-Roman antiquity has largely neglected debates about anti-Blackness in her writing. To begin to fill this gap, this article focuses on Arendt's concept of the public ( The Human Condition ) and her condemnations of Black student movements ( On Violence ).
Harriet Fertik
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The Black Public Sphere: A Public Culture Book.
Contemporary Sociology, 1996T. Harvey
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Woman Suffrage and the New Negro in the Black Public Sphere
2020Jane Rhodes
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The Uses of Vastey: Reading Black Sovereignty in the Atlantic Public Sphere
2017By looking at largely contemporaneous nineteenth-century writing about Vastey from England, the United States, and France, this chapter examines how Baron de Vastey’s writings became the signs and symbols of the promises of black sovereignty in the Atlantic World.
Marlene L. Daut
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Editorial Comment: On Thinking the Black Public Sphere
Public Culture, 1994Arjun Appadurai +3 more
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The Final (Af)front: Space and the Black Public Sphere
2004Marilyn M. Thomas-Houston
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Gendered labour, negritude and the Black public sphere
Historical Research, 2022Abstract This article uses the landmark 1956 Congress of Black Writers and Artists to re-examine the gendering of the Black public sphere. Organized by Présence africaine, the journal/publishing house that served as the hub for the negritude movement, the congress is one of the iconic moments in African and Black intellectual history ...
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3. The Twilight of Empire: The Suez Canal Crisis of 1956 and the Black Public Sphere
2016Vaughn Rasberry, M. Stucke
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