The Intimately Oppressed Essay

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    Americans in the reverse, an excuse for not being able to understand their master. But slaves learned the “good” English of whites too, and could gather valuable information from eavesdropping and reading newspapers. (187-8) This means of resistance was intimately connected with and further influenced the identity of African diaspora. Language was also an important vehicle for resistance during the American Revolution and the Great Awakening periods. However, words could not truly halt the day-to-day traumas

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    The Uneven Balance

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    The Uneven Balance Times are always changing. Change does not take place overnight but rather through generations of crusading. For instance, the English Women’s Right Movement started taking shape during the early nineteenth century, but it would not be until the start of the twentieth century when women achieved more rights. Published during the dawn of the movement, critics are calling Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice an early representation of the changing times. Even though critics cite the

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    University) explores the link between diet and racial/social identity. The author draws many parallels between meat consumption and oppression while acknowledging that vegetarianism is often considered a privileged status. She states that the most oppressed groups in society have the least access to fresh, healthy produce, and are the most likely to have diets that are high in animal based protein. She also points out that many non-western diets are vegetarian based and are not considered elitist. She

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    tensions and sometimes divisions along gender, class, and ideological lines within the Civil Rights Movement in the 50’s and 60’s. Each part of America had their own way of working with African Americans. To state the obvious, the South kept them oppressed and as a low-wage labor source as long as possible, and in the North a relatively free class was

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    Katherine Johnson, the woman who sent the first American man to outer space was a pioneer for women, and more importantly women of color. Margot Lee Shetterley’s book Hidden Figures writes about a woman who is calm, passionate, steady, and sure of herself. In Chapter seventeen Outer Space of Hidden Figures by Shetterly described Katherine as a eager, passionate woman on fire for knowledge and a love for the science and math. During chapter eighteen With All Deliberate Speed, she writes of Katherines

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    An individual’s impression of control over and ownership of their own body is essential to their feeling of autonomy. Without some sense of bodily autonomy, it is difficult for individuals to establish their own emotional autonomy. Throughout history, this bodily autonomy has been impaired by sexual control and dominance. By painting dystopian societies that heavily restrict reproduction and sexuality, Margaret Atwood’s novel The Handmaid’s Tale, her poem A Woman’s Issue, and George Orwell’s 1984

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    many struggles. The Letter from Birmingham Jail highlights this question of meaning and purpose in our lives once again with “We know through painful experience that freedom is never voluntarily given by the oppressor; it must be demanded by the oppressed.” (123) The fact that African Americans felt this way it is hard to live a life of meaning and purpose. Especially when your freedom a right by our Constitution is being taken from you. To have all of these differences in society whether it relates

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    Double-Consciousness in Audre Lorde’s “Coal” There is a double-consciousness, according to W.E Burghardt Du Bois, in which we view ourselves through a veil. Underneath of this veil is the true self. The person that we are in our purest state. The veil itself, however, is how society sees us and our realization of that projection. Looking in a mirror, both layers can be seen. However, the true self is still covered, muddled, unclear beneath the sheer outer shell of expectation. In her poem “Coal”

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    Colonialism and Oppression in the African Diaspora The experiences of the women of the African diaspora are as diverse as the regions they have come to inhabit. Despite the variety in their local realities, African and African-descended women across the planet share in many common experiences. Wherever they have made their homes, these women tend to occupy inferior or marginalized positions within their societies. Whether in the United States, Europe, Latin America, or even Africa itself, black

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    Liberation, Rebellion, and Relevance

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    Liberation, Rebellion and Relevance In “The Rebel an essay on man in revolt,” Albert Camus (1956) muses on the absurd origins of rebellion and art and their significance to the individual and society. While reading Camus I began to think about how important art really is and how appalling some of the trends in education and arts funding apparently are. This is what inspired me to write this paper but my intention is not to directly address any of the many and various issues concerning arts education

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