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Slave Rebellion, Fugitive Literature, And The Force Of Law, Jeffrey Hole 2017 University of the Pacific

Slave Rebellion, Fugitive Literature, And The Force Of Law, Jeffrey Hole

First-Year Honors Program Research Seminars

From the Stono Rebellion in 1739 to the revolt aboard the ship Amistad in 1839, from Nat Turner’s uprising in 1831 to the raid on Harpers Ferry in 1859—on land and on sea, in U.S. territory and international spaces—slaves and abolitionist allies resisted the legal doctrines and martial enforcement of the slave system. In this presentation, we will explore how nineteenth-century literature imagined and depicted slave rebellion, particularly in the decade before the Civil War and in the aftermath of the 1850 Fugitive Slave Act. A component of the Great Compromise of 1850, the Fugitive Slave Act strengthened a set …


North Omaha Voter: Which Excuse Is Yours!! Part 2, Preston Love Jr. 2017 University of Nebraska at Omaha

North Omaha Voter: Which Excuse Is Yours!! Part 2, Preston Love Jr.

Black Studies Faculty Publications

Bellevue University. I wrote two 2000-word papers on my finding. Both papers analyzed finding from a random survey which included an interview question. The survey asked about voter habits, age, race, and reasons for the participant who are not voting, why not. The results were stimulating and I plan to expand on the study this year. The two papers are available from my website: prestonlovejr.com/ blackvotesmatter/case study.

Last issue I shared a short excerpt from one of papers. The following represents a summary of the reasons stated by the participants on why they are not voting. The sample was 55% …


Ua12/2/1 College Heights Herald, Vol. 93, No. 13, WKU Student Affairs 2017 Western Kentucky University

Ua12/2/1 College Heights Herald, Vol. 93, No. 13, Wku Student Affairs

WKU Archives Records

WKU campus newspaper reporting campus, athletic and Bowling Green, Kentucky news. This issue contains articles:

  • Yaacoub, Sarah. Cultures Combine – International Festival
  • Kast, Monica. Future Teachers Face Pension Uncertainty
  • Stahl, Matt. Local Taco to Come to Town This Month
  • Coyle, Cameron. Campus Police Chief to Form Advisory Council – Mitchell Walker
  • DeLetter, Emily. Timothy Caboni Announces Strategic Planning Committee
  • King, Jennifer. Editorial Cartoon re: Football Protests
  • Mays, Remi. Review of Mother – Movies
  • Johnson, Kalyn. Pointless Protest – Burning NFL Jerseys
  • Murrer, Erick. The Long Haul of Becoming a Professional – Journalism
  • Heichelbech, Evan. NCAA Shakeup Is a Troubling Motif …


Exorcising Power, John Jarzemsky 2017 City University of New York (CUNY)

Exorcising Power, John Jarzemsky

Theses and Dissertations

This paper theorizes that authors, in an act I have termed “literary exorcism,” project and expunge parts of their identities that are in conflict with the overriding political agenda of their texts, into the figure of the villain. Drawing upon theories of power put forth by Judith Butler, I argue that this sort of projection arises in reaction to dominant ideas and institutions, but that authors find ways to manipulate this process over time. By examining a broad cross-section of English-language literature over several centuries, this phenomenon and its evolution can be observed, as well as the means by which …


Through The Eyes Of A Child: The Portrayal Of South Africa’S Apartheid In Children’S Cinema, Keira B. Koch 2017 Gettysburg College

Through The Eyes Of A Child: The Portrayal Of South Africa’S Apartheid In Children’S Cinema, Keira B. Koch

Student Publications

August 1977: a thirteen-year-old African American girl stands at the gate of an airport holding a bouquet of flowers. Standing with her mother, she is anxiously awaiting the arrival of Mahree, a South African school girl her family has offered to host for the upcoming academic school year. The young African American girl, Piper, is excited to meet this South African girl, hoping their African heritage will bond them together. The passengers all exit the plane, and Piper starts to worry that they are at the wrong gate because neither Piper nor her mom spotted a fourteen-year-old South African girl …


The Schooling Experiences Of African American Males Attending Predominately White Independent Schools, Dana Adams Coleman 2017 Loyola Marymount University

The Schooling Experiences Of African American Males Attending Predominately White Independent Schools, Dana Adams Coleman

LMU/LLS Theses and Dissertations

This dissertation seeks to examine the schooling experiences of African American males attending predominately White independent schools in California. Using Critical Race Theory as a theoretical framework and the factors contributing to schooling experiences, this qualitative research explores the role of student self-perception, teacher expectations, and parent involvement as contributing factors to participants overall schooling experiences. Utilizing counterstorytelling as a means of capturing the rich narratives shared by the participants, data analysis included holistic content coding based on themes that emerged from narrative examination. Findings indicate how parent involvement became the overarching critical component that was most significant in positive …


Making Voices Heard: Collecting And Sharing Oral Histories From Users Of Segregated Libraries In The South (Presentation For The Oral History Association Annual Meeting, October 2017), Matthew R. Griffis 2017 University of Southern Mississippi

Making Voices Heard: Collecting And Sharing Oral Histories From Users Of Segregated Libraries In The South (Presentation For The Oral History Association Annual Meeting, October 2017), Matthew R. Griffis

Publications and Other Resources

From the conference program: "This presentation reviews the progress and objectives of a federally-funded, 3-year oral history project that explores how segregated Carnegie libraries were used as places of community-making, interaction, and learning for African Americans before integration in the 1960s. Known then as “Carnegie colored libraries,” these public libraries opened in eight southern states between 1900 and 1925 and were an extension of the well-known library development program funded by the Carnegie Corporation of New York. Some operated for as many as six decades until, by the 1970s, most had closed or were integrated into the library systems of …


A Separate Space: Remembering Meridian’S Segregated Carnegie Library, 1913-74, Matthew R. Griffis 2017 University of Southern Mississippi

A Separate Space: Remembering Meridian’S Segregated Carnegie Library, 1913-74, Matthew R. Griffis

Publications and Other Resources

This article explores the largely undocumented history of Meridian, Mississippi’s 13th Street library, a segregated branch library constructed in 1912-13 with funds from Carnegie’s famous library program. Although the library no longer stands, it remains an important connection between libraries in Mississippi and the history of race relations. Using archival sources as well as oral history interviews with some of the library’s former users, the article considers the library’s importance as an early symbol of civic autonomy for Meridian’s African Americans and how it became a valued educational support center and community space. The article closes with a call …


Chop-Suey: Asian Bodies Consumed In The Harlem Renaissance, Cole Chang 2017 Macalester College

Chop-Suey: Asian Bodies Consumed In The Harlem Renaissance, Cole Chang

Gateway Prize for Excellent Writing

No abstract provided.


Ua19/16/2 Basketball Press Releases, WKU Athletic Media Relations 2017 Western Kentucky University

Ua19/16/2 Basketball Press Releases, Wku Athletic Media Relations

WKU Archives Records

Press releases, game statistics and photos related to the WKU basketball team August to December 2017.


Lifespan Communication And Career Development Of Black Teachers: A Socio-Ecological Approach, Veronica Whinnett Hurd 2017 Old Dominion University

Lifespan Communication And Career Development Of Black Teachers: A Socio-Ecological Approach, Veronica Whinnett Hurd

Communication & Theatre Arts Theses

This thesis unlocks the lifespan story of nine Black participants as they reflected on the communicative practices that guided their career journey towards becoming a teacher. Through the lens of Bronfenbrenner’s (1979) socio-ecological development model, the microsystem, mesosystem, exosystem, macrosystem, and chronosystem were examined to understand the content of career-related memories and with whom or what the communicative experiences occurred with across the participants’ lifespan. This study also takes an in-depth look at how the content of the memories evolved across Erikson’s (1964) childhood, adolescence, and young adulthood developmental periods, and the influence of the proximal and distal socio-ecological environments …


Ua19/16/2 Womens' Basketball Press Releases, WKU Athletic Media Relations 2017 Western Kentucky University

Ua19/16/2 Womens' Basketball Press Releases, Wku Athletic Media Relations

WKU Archives Records

Press releases, photos and game statistics related to WKU women's basketball team from August to December 2017.


Searching For "Free Territory" In Saidiya Hartman's Lose Your Mother, Tisha Brooks 2017 Southern Illinois University Edwardsville

Searching For "Free Territory" In Saidiya Hartman's Lose Your Mother, Tisha Brooks

SIUE Faculty Research, Scholarship, and Creative Activity

This essay locates Saidiya Hartman’s travel and writing in relationship to a longer and multifaceted legacy of black travel that includes the forced/coerced movement of black people across the Atlantic during the slave trade, the migratory travel of black diasporic peoples, and African American tourism to Africa, Ghana in particular. This essay argues that Hartman's text challenges us to build bridges across the boundaries we often construct between these various types of movement, enabling us to see the ways in which these journeys intersect in tenuous ways. Pushing beyond narrow definitions of travel, this essay questions singular frameworks that focus …


A Father's Lament: Uva Law Professor A. Benjamin Spencer On Charlottesville, A. Benjamin Spencer 2017 William & Mary Law School

A Father's Lament: Uva Law Professor A. Benjamin Spencer On Charlottesville, A. Benjamin Spencer

Popular Media

No abstract provided.


Toward A Cleaner Whiteness: New Racial Identities, David Ingram 2017 Loyola University Chicago

Toward A Cleaner Whiteness: New Racial Identities, David Ingram

David Ingram

The article re-examines racial and ethnic identity within the context of pedagogical attempts to instill a positive white identity in white students who are conscious of the history of white racism and white privilege. The paper draws heavily from whiteness studies and developmental cognitive science in arguing (against Henry Giroux and Stuart Hall) that a positive notion of white identity, however postmodern its construction, is an oxymoron, since whiteness designates less a cultural/ethnic ethos and meaningful way of life than a pathological structure of privilege and narrowminded cognitive habitus.


Ua12/2/1 College Heights Herald, Vol. 93, No. 12, WKU Student Affairs 2017 Western Kentucky University

Ua12/2/1 College Heights Herald, Vol. 93, No. 12, Wku Student Affairs

WKU Archives Records

WKU campus newspaper reporting campus, athletic and Bowling Green, Kentucky news. This issue contains articles:

  • Moore, Noah. Students Reflect on Death of Fresh Worker – Debra Wiley-Mitchell
  • Harsh, Spencer. Making the Cut – JC’s Barbershop
  • Fletcher, Griffin. Campus Commemorates Banned Books Week
  • Deppen, Laurel. WKU Student Nick Lawson Releases EP
  • Hovell, Nolan. Exploring Bowling Green’s Music Scene
  • King, Jennifer. Editorial Cartoon re: Retirement Pensions
  • The Pension Crisis
  • Hormel, David. Don’t Prioritize Patriotic Iconography Over People
  • Mathews, Carly. Faculty Expresses Low Morale in Survey
  • Alvey, Rebekah. Attorney General Approves New Requirements for Gatton Academy of Math & Science
  • Ziege, Nicole. Student …


Ua12/2/1 College Heights Herald, Vol. 93, No. 11, WKU Student Affairs 2017 Western Kentucky University

Ua12/2/1 College Heights Herald, Vol. 93, No. 11, Wku Student Affairs

WKU Archives Records

WKU campus newspaper reporting campus, athletic and Bowling Green, Kentucky news. This issue contains articles:

  • Kast, Monica. Interim Title IX Guidelines Announced
  • Mohr, Olivia. Kidding Around – Goat Yoga
  • DeLetter, Emily. Protestors Gather Against Proposed Health Care Bill – Affordable Care Act
  • Alvey, Rebekah. Board of Regents Discuss Diversity Plan, Budget
  • Alvey, Rebekah. New Leadership & Goals Set for Budget Council
  • King, Jennifer. Editorial Cartoon re: Football Players Protests
  • Burgess, Kelly. Diets: Fact or Fad?
  • Leonard, Nicole. Fleeting Feminist – Television
  • Gabhart, Ebonee. Dual Responsibility of Media & Its Consumers
  • Pritchett, Grace. Behind the Curtain – Theatre & Dance
  • Collins, …


Escalating Language At Traffic Stops: Two Case Studies, Jamalieh Haley 2017 Portland State University

Escalating Language At Traffic Stops: Two Case Studies, Jamalieh Haley

Dissertations and Theses

In recent years, the public has seen a rise in recorded footage of violent encounters between police and Black American citizens, partially due to technology such as cell phones, dash-cameras, and body-cameras. This linguistic study examines how these encounters get escalated to the point of violence by asking 1) what kind of directives were used, 2) how were they responded to, 3) how the directives contributed to escalation, and 4) how might power and authority have played a role. I use two case studies to analyze directives and their responses. Findings reveal that repetition of directives on the part of …


Ua12/2/1 College Heights Herald, Vol. 93, No. 10, WKU Student Affairs 2017 Western Kentucky University

Ua12/2/1 College Heights Herald, Vol. 93, No. 10, Wku Student Affairs

WKU Archives Records

WKU campus newspaper reporting campus, athletic and Bowling Green, Kentucky news. This issue contains articles:

  • Coyle, Cameron. WKU Gets Tougher on Tailgating Activities
  • Collins, Emma. Land of the Fees
  • Coyle, Cameron. WKU Police Names New Chief – Mitchell Walker
  • Waters, Adrianna. Second Food Pantry Opens on South Campus
  • DeLetter, Emily. WKU Organization Receives Gold Star Status – Collegiate Scholars
  • King, Jennifer. Editorial Cartoon re: Budget Cuts
  • Out of Ink: University of Louisville’s Journalism Death Penalty is Warning to Kentucky Student Publications
  • Campbell, Jordan. Perspective of a WKU Musical Theatre Alumni – Budget
  • Porter, Sam. A New Test – Football
  • Manlove, …


Frances Gateward And John Jennings. The Blacker The Ink: Constructions Of Black Identity In Comics And Sequential Art. Rutgers Up, 2015., Evan B. Thomas 2017 Ohio State University - Main Campus

Frances Gateward And John Jennings. The Blacker The Ink: Constructions Of Black Identity In Comics And Sequential Art. Rutgers Up, 2015., Evan B. Thomas

Studies in 20th & 21st Century Literature

Review of Frances Gateward and John Jennings. The Blacker the Ink: Constructions of Black Identity in Comics and Sequential Art. Rutgers UP, 2015.


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