Black freethinkers: a history of African American secularism
In: Critical Insurgencies
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In: American Abolitionism and Antislavery
Intro -- Halftitle Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1. Puritans and Slavery -- 2. Black Abolitionist Writers in the Age of Revolution -- 3. Black Petitioning and Organized Abolitionism in Revolutionary Massachusetts -- 4. Abolition of Slavery and the Slave Trade -- 5. Massachusetts Blacks and the Growth of the Northern Antislavery Movement -- 6. Black Emigration and Abolition in the Early Republic -- 7. Abolitionism and the Politics of Slavery in Early Antebellum Massachusetts -- Afterword -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index.
In: Modern intellectual history: MIH, Volume 18, Issue 4, p. 1190-1199
ISSN: 1479-2451
In September 1829, David Walker published the first edition of hisAppeal to the Coloured Citizens of the World, a pamphlet that became a stirring call to arms for both slaves and free blacks alike. Walker's audience was blacks in the United States and his aim was to foster black unity and education, combat racial stereotypes, and make the case for the abolition of slavery. Like most abolitionists, black and white, Walker hoped that the end of slavery could come about through peaceful means. Unlike most other abolitionists, however, Walker openly called for slaves to violently resist their bondage, stating, "it is no more harm for you to kill a man, who is trying to kill you, than it is for you to take a drink of water when thirsty." While advocates of pacifism and nonviolence often based their positions on their Christian faith, it was Walker's Christianity which lent support to his calls for revolutionary violence. "Does the Lord condescend to hear their cries and see their tears in consequence of oppression?" he asked. "Will he let the oppressors rest comfortably and happy always? Will he not cause the very children of the oppressors to rise up against them, and oftimes to put them to death?" Walker firmly believed that God would have his vengeance on blacks' oppressors and that the vehicles for that vengeance might very well be the slaves themselves.
In: The black scholar: journal of black studies and research, Volume 48, Issue 3, p. 69-71
ISSN: 2162-5387
Over the past century, the automobile has become an integral part of modern industrializedsociety. Consumer demands, regulatory legislation, and the corporate need togenerate a profit, have been the most influential factors in driving forward the evolutionof the automobile. As the comfort, safety, and reliability of the automobile haveincreased, so has its complexity, and most definitely its mass.The work within this thesis addresses the twofold problem of economy and ecologywith respect to sustainable development of automobiles. Specifically, the conflictingproblems of reducing weight, and maintaining or improving noise, vibration, andharshness behaviour are addressed. Potential solutions to these problems must also beexecutable at the same, or preferably lower production costs. The hypothesis is that byreplacing acoustic treatments, aesthetic details, and complex systems of structural componentsboth on the interior and exterior of the vehicle with a single multi-functionalbody panel, functionality can be retained at a reduced mass (i.e. reduced consumptionof raw materials) and reduced fiscal cost.A case study is performed focusing on the roof structure of a production vehicle. Fullvehicle and component level acoustic testing is performed to acquire acoustic functionalrequirements. Vibro-mechanical testing at the component level is performedto acquire structural functional requirements complimentary to those in the vehiclesdesign specifications. Finite element modelling and analysis is employed to createa model representative of the as-tested component and evaluate its acoustic and mechanicalbehaviour numerically. Results of numerical simulations are compared withthe measured results for both acoustic and mechanical response in order to verify themodel and firmly establish a set of acoustic and mechanical constraints for future work.A new, multi-layered, multi-functional sandwich panel concept is proposed which replacesthe outer sheet metal, damping treatments, transverse beams, and interior trimof the existing ...
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In: Black Lives and Liberation
In: (Management Bookshelf Series)
In: SMU Cox School of Business Research Paper No. 20-02
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Working paper
In: Annual review of sociology, Volume 43, Issue 1, p. 101-119
ISSN: 1545-2115
Network sampling emerged as a set of methods for drawing statistically valid samples of hard-to-reach populations. The first form of network sampling, multiplicity sampling, involved asking respondents about events affecting those in their personal networks; it was subsequently applied to studies of homicide, HIV, and other topics, but its usefulness is limited to public events. Link-tracing designs employ a different approach to study hard-to-reach populations, using a set of respondents that expands in waves as each round of respondents recruit their peers. Link-tracing as applied to hidden populations, often described as snowball sampling, was initially considered a form of convenience sampling. This changed with the development of respondent-driven sampling (RDS), a widely used network sampling method in which the link-tracing design is adapted to provide the basis for statistical inference. The literature on RDS is large and rapidly expanding, involving contributions by numerous independent research groups employing data from dozens of different countries. Within this literature, many important research questions remain unresolved, including how best to choose among alternative RDS estimators, how to refine existing estimators to make them less dependent on assumptions that are sometimes counterfactual, and perhaps the greatest unresolved issue, how best to calculate the variability of the estimates.
In: The journal of psychology: interdisciplinary and applied, Volume 141, Issue 3, p. 281-292
ISSN: 1940-1019
In: Social networks: an international journal of structural analysis, Volume 56, p. 93-101
ISSN: 0378-8733
Introduction: The contours of Black intellectual history / Keisha N. Blain, Christopher Cameron, and Ashley D. Farmer -- Black internationalism. Introduction / Michael O. West -- "Every wide-awake Negro teacher of French should know" : the pedagogies of Black internationalism in the early twentieth century / Celeste Day Moore -- Afro-Cuban intellectuals and the new Negro renaissance : Bernardo Ruiz Suarez's The color question in the two Americas / Reena N. Goldthree -- "To start something to help these people" : African American women and the occupation of Haiti, 1915-1934 / Brandon R. Byrd -- Religion and spirituality. Introduction / Judith Weisenfeld -- Isolated believer : Alain Locke, Baha'i secularist / David Weinfeld -- The new Negro renaissance and African American secularism / Christopher Cameron -- "I had a praying grandmother" : religion, prophetic witness, and Black women's herstories / LeRhonda S. Manigault-Bryant -- Racial politics and struggles for social justice. Introduction / Pero Gaglo Dagbovie -- Historical ventriloquy : Black thought and sexual politics in the interracial marriage of Frederick Douglass / Guy Emerson Mount -- Reigning assimilationists and defiant Black power : the struggle to define and regulate racist ideas / Ibram X. Kendi -- Becoming African women : women's cultural nationalist theorizing in the U.S organization and the Committee for Unified Newark / Ashley D. Farmer -- Black radicalism. introduction / Robin D. G. Kelley -- Runaways, rescuers, and the politics of breaking the law / Christopher Bonner -- Conspiracies, seditions, rebellions : concepts and categories in the study of slave resistance / Gregory Childs -- African American expats, Guyana, and the Pan-African ideal in the 1970s / Russell Rickford
In: Social Sciences: open access journal, Volume 11, Issue 2, p. 74
ISSN: 2076-0760
We investigated gender bias in letters of recommendation as a possible cause of the under-representation of women in Experimental Particle Physics (EPP), where about 15% of faculty are female—well below the 60% level in psychology and sociology. We analyzed 2206 letters in EPP and these two social sciences using standard lexical measures as well as two new measures: author status and an open-ended search for gendered language. In contrast to former studies, women were not depicted as more communal, less agentic, or less standout. Lexical measures revealed few gender differences in either discipline. The open-ended analysis revealed disparities favoring women in social science and men in EPP. However, female EPP candidates were characterized as "brilliant" in nearly three times as many letters as were men.
Mammalian genomes encode tens of thousands of noncoding RNAs. Most noncoding transcripts exhibit nuclear localization and several have been shown to play a role in the regulation of gene expression and chromatin remodeling. To investigate the function of such RNAs, methods to massively map the genomic interacting sites of multiple transcripts have been developed; however, these methods have some limitations. Here, we introduce RNA And DNA Interacting Complexes Ligated and sequenced (RADICL-seq), a technology that maps genome-wide RNA–chromatin interactions in intact nuclei. RADICL-seq is a proximity ligation-based methodology that reduces the bias for nascent transcription, while increasing genomic coverage and unique mapping rate efficiency compared with existing methods. RADICL-seq identifies distinct patterns of genome occupancy for different classes of transcripts as well as cell type–specific RNA-chromatin interactions, and highlights the role of transcription in the establishment of chromatin structure. ; This work was funded by a Research Grant from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT), Japan, to the RIKEN Center for Life Science Technologies (http://www.mext.go.jp/en/). This work was also supported by the Francis Crick Institute, UK, which receives its core funding from Cancer Research UK (FC010110), the UK Medical Research Council (FC010110), and the Wellcome Trust (FC010110). N.M.L. is a Winton Group Leader in recognition of the Winton Charitable Foundation's support towards the establishment of the Francis Crick Institute. N.M.L. isadditionally funded by a Wellcome Trust Joint Investigator Award (103760/Z/14/Z) and the MRC eMedLab Medical Bioinformatics Infrastructure Award (MR/L016311/1). Work in G.C.-B.'s laboratory was supported by the European Union (Horizon 2020 European Research Council Consolidator Grant EPIScOPE), Swedish Research Council (no. 2015-03558), Swedish Brain Foundation (no. FO2017-0075), and Ming Wai Lau Centre for Reparative Medicine, Hong Kong. E.A. was supported by European Union, Horizon 2020, Marie-Skłodowska Curie Actions, grant SOLO no. 794689. Y.A.M. was partially supported by RSF grant 18-14-00240 and the Russian Ministry for Science and Higher Education. Work in V.O.'s laboratory (J.G. and V.O.) was supported by grants from the European Union FP7 (InteGeR Marie Curie Initial Training Network and MODHEP), the Italian Ministry of Education, University and Research MIUR and the National Research Center CNR (Epigen), and grant from KAUST BAS01-01-37. Open access funding provided by Karolinska Institute.
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