Rosalyn Gold - Onwude went on to detail the hardship, inconvenience and general second -
class citizenship suffered by Stanford's Littles (backcourt players, or «peasants,» as she also calls them) on a team built around Bigs (frontcourt players, a.k.a. «the czars, the emperors, the queens»): «The Littles endure harder drills and slow delivery of new gear only to tolerate yet another injustice: the plays aren't for us.»
Not exact matches
The Early Days of Christianity Women have
suffered second -
class citizenship for so long that it is hardly surprising if nowadays we are suspicious that it is not God but man who continues to debar...
His analysis
suffers from all the intellectual flabbiness (for example, claiming that «the U.S. is fascist,» or that «the greed and avarice of the U.S. ruling
class are seemingly unparalleled in history») and turgid prose (like his reference to the «Dickensianizing of postmodern megalopolises,» or his final chapter, entitled, «Unthinking Whiteness: Critical
Citizenship in Gringolandia») that are commonly associated with the postmodern genre.