The Trayvon Martin in us: an American tragedy
In: Black studies & critical thinking 79
In: Black Studies and Critical Thinking 79
Contents: William L. Johnson III: A Message for Our Sons and Daughters: Remembering Trayvon – Rodney D. Smith: I Cried: My Personal Sentiments About Trayvon Martin's Death and the George Zimmerman Trial – Theodore W. Burgh: Why Did Zimmerman Get Out of His Car? – Quito J. Swan: If We Must Die: Trayvon Martin and the Black Piñata – Yvette Modestin: The Pain Felt by Every Afro-Descendant – Cristina Cabral: Personal Reflections on Race and Blackness From an Academic Afro-Latin Woman – María Zalduondo: Mater Dolorosa: The Bléssed Virgin Wore a Hoodie – Timothy J. Lensmire: A Letter to My Son – Emmanuel Harris II: A Message to My Daughter: Of Trayvon Martin and Young Black Men – Angela Y. Douglas: Questions Arise: The Political, Legal, and Social Implications of the Trayvon Martin Tragedy – Brian Lozenski/Jonel Daphnis: Trayvon, Medicine, and Education in the US: Moving Away From Individualized Analyses of Race – Michelle C. Stevens: Historical PTSD - In the Midst of a Tragedy – Louis L. Woods II: Killing for Inclusion: Racial Violence and Assimilation Into the Whiteness Gang – Dennis B. Rogers: Reflections on the Diversity of Thought in Black America on the Trayvon Martin Case – Deborah A. Brunson: «How shall we sing the Lord's song in a strange land?» Reflections Upon Responses of Trayvon Martin's Parents to the George Zimmerman Trial – Todd Steven Burroughs: Disposable Images of Our HipHoprisy: Trayvon Martin Stares at Emmett Till – Glen Anthony Harris: How Does It Feel to Be a Problem? Reflections on the Trayvon Martin Case and the American Idea – Antonio D. Tillis: The Black Male Defiled: Whose Fault Is It? Critical Historical Analysis on Black Male Subjecthood.
In: Black studies & critical thinking 79
In: Black studies and critical thinking vol. 79
Englisch
Peter Lang Inc., International Academic Publishers
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