scholarly journals The Feasibility of Constructing Profiles of Native Americans From the People of Color Racial Identity Attitude Scale: A Brief Report

Author(s):  
Alfred Bryant ◽  
Stanley B. Baker
2016 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
pp. 116-122 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew J. Miller ◽  
Alvin N. Alvarez ◽  
Robin Li ◽  
Grace A. Chen ◽  
Derek K. Iwamoto

2018 ◽  
Vol 6 (9) ◽  
pp. 5
Author(s):  
Poonam Chourey

The research expounded the turmoil, uproar, anguish, pain, and agony faced by native Indians and Native Americans in the South Dakota region.  To explain the grief, pain and lamentation, this research studies the works of Elizabeth Cook-Lyn.  She laments for the people who died and also survived in the Wounded Knee Massacre.  The people at that time went through huge exploitation and tolerated the cruelty of American Federal government. This research brings out the unchangeable scenario of the Native Americans and Native Indians.  Mr. Padmanaban shed light on the works of Elizabeth Cook-Lynn who was activist.  Mr. Padmanaban is very influenced with Elizabeth Cook-Lynn’s thoughts and works. She hails from Sioux Community, a Native American.  She was an outstanding and exceptional scholar.  She experienced the agony and pain faced by the native people.  The researcher, Mr. Padmanaban is concerned the sufferings, agony, pain faced by the South Dakota people at that time.  The researcher also is acknowledging the Indian freedom fighters who got India independence after over 200 years of sufferings.  The foreign nationals entered our country with the sole purpose of business.  Slowly and steadily the took over the reign of the country and ruled us for years, made all of us suffer a lot.


2021 ◽  
Vol 31 (1) ◽  
pp. 119-138
Author(s):  
Earnest N. Bracey ◽  

Many revisionist historians today try to make the late President Andrew Jackson out to be something that he was not—that is, a man of all the people. In our uninhibited, polarized culture, the truth should mean something. Therefore, studying the character of someone like Andrew Jackson should be fully investigated, and researched, as this work attempts to do. Indeed, this article tells us that we should not accept lies and conspiracy theories as the truth. Such revisionist history comes into sharp focus in Bradley J. Birzer’s latest book, In Defense of Andrew Jackson. Indeed, his (selective) efforts are surprisingly wrong, as he tries to give alternative explanations for Jackson’s corrupt life and political malfeasance. Hence, the lawlessness of Andrew Jackson cannot be ignored or “white washed” from American history. More important, discrediting the objective truth about Andrew Jackson, and his blatant misuse of executive power as the U.S. President should never be dismissed, like his awful treatment of Blacks and other minorities in the United States. It should have been important to Birzer to get his story right about Andrew Jackson, with a more balanced approach in regards to the man. Finally, Jackson should have tried to eliminate Black slavery in his life time, not embrace it, based on the ideas of human dignity and our common humanity. To be brutally honest, it is one thing to disagree with Andrew Jackson; but it is quite another to feel that he, as President of the United States, was on the side of all the American people during his time, because it was not true. Perhaps the biggest question is: Could Andrew Jackson have made a positive difference for every American, even Black slaves and Native Americans?


2020 ◽  
pp. 27-45
Author(s):  
Lea Shaver

This chapter describes the book Underpants Dance, which only depicts four white people out of all the thirty characters. However, the book still shows quite a significant underrepresentation of America's diversity. In this story, none of the people of color are important enough to have names. They serve only as a sprinkling of color in the background. The book's settings and events also reflect a distinctly upper-middle-class lifestyle. The chapter further explains that there is nothing wrong with any single children's book being culturally specific to a white, upper-income, American experience. The problem is that this pattern is so strong that children's literature as a whole is systematically less attractive or even alienating to children who do not fit that mold.


2017 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 218-233
Author(s):  
Isaac Matheus Santos Batista ◽  
Marcelo Machado Martins ◽  
Laura Susana DUQUE-ARRAZOLA

Muitas pessoas negras que lutam contra o racismo têm utilizado a internet como um meio para exercer sua cidadania e ativismo político. Um exemplo disso pode ser visto nos posts de transição capilar que são frutos da resistência dos negros contra o padrão de beleza hegemônico que privilegia o branco. Neste trabalho, analisamos como se dá a geração de sentido do discurso de um post do Facebook que mostra o resultado da transição capilar feita por uma pessoa negra. Por meio da semiótica discursiva, compreendemos que esse post de transição capilar apresenta uma valorização da negritude, ao dar um novo significado, agora positivo, às origens e aos traços físicos dos negros. Além disso, percebe-se que o discurso presente no ambiente virtual se impõe para o mundo material, pois o post também visa manipular os outros a valorizarem e aceitarem os traços diacríticos da raça negra.+++++Many people of color who struggle against racism have used internet as a means to exercise their citizenship and political activism. One example of this is the capillary transition Facebook status and posts that are a result of the black resistance against the white standard of beauty. In this paper, we will analyze the generation of meaning of the discourse of a Facebook status that shows the results of a capillary transition made by a person of color. Using the discursive semiotics, we comprehended that this status presents a valuation of blackness, by giving a new meaning, this time positive, to the origins and to the phenotypes of the people of color. Furthermore, we noticed that the discourse on the virtual environmentimposes itself out to the material world, because this status also aims to manipulate others topositively value and accept the diacritic features of the black race.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document