Civil WarsSimon and Schuster, 1995 - 188 páginas A meditation on the private and public fault lines which divide American society. In Civil Wars, June Jordan's battleground is the intersection of private and public reality, which she explores through a blending of personal reflection and political analysis. From journal entries on the line between poetry and politics and a discussion of language and power in "White" versus "Black" English, to First Amendment issues, children's rights, Black studies, American violence, and sexuality, Jordan documents the very personal ways in which she meshes with the social issues of modern-day life in this country. |
Dentro del libro
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Contenido
Testimony 1964 | 3 |
Letter to Michael 1964 | 16 |
Notes Toward a Black Balancing | 84 |
On the Occasion of a Clear and Present Danger at Yale 1975 | 90 |
Notes of a Barnard Dropout 1975 | 96 |
A Victory and a Promise 1976 | 103 |
Declaration of an Independence I Would Just as Soon Not Have 1976 | 115 |
Thinking about My Poetry 1977 | 122 |
Where Is the Love? 1978 | 140 |
Against the Wall 1978 | 147 |
In the Valley of the Shadow of Death 1978 | 150 |
Black History as Myth 1979 | 163 |
Beyond Apocalypse Now 1980 | 169 |
Civil Wars 1980 | 178 |
Permissions | 189 |
New Lives 1978 | 130 |
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Términos y frases comunes
African Agostinho Neto and/or Angola Arthur Miller asked Barnard Barnard College Bedford-Stuyvesant began Black America Black children Black English Black language Black students Black woman Brooklyn called child City College Cool World cops create create Crown Heights death Duke enemies fact Fannie Lou Hamer father feel fight film freedom friends Georgia Douglas Johnson Hamp Harlem Hassidic Hassidim hate hatred human Hurston identity issue June Jordan kids kill leaders lives look Malcolm Malcolm X mean Miami Mississippi mother movement murder Mykonos Negro never night poem poet poetry police political powerless published racist Richard Wright Shirley Clarke street struggle survival talk teach teacher things Third World tion truth Valerie Victor Rhodes violence walk white America white English women words write Yale York Zora Neale Hurston
Referencias a este libro
Critical Humanisms: Humanist/anti-humanist Dialogues Martin Halliwell,Andy Mousley Sin vista previa disponible - 2003 |