Sentences with phrase «everyday racism by»

Not exact matches

Drew Hart is the author of Trouble I've Seen: Changing the Way the Church Views Racism, which released in January and which tackles police brutality, mass incarceration, antiblack stereotypes, poverty, and everyday acts of racism by placing them in the larger framework of white suprRacism, which released in January and which tackles police brutality, mass incarceration, antiblack stereotypes, poverty, and everyday acts of racism by placing them in the larger framework of white suprracism by placing them in the larger framework of white supremacy.
In Trouble I've Seen, he addresses police brutality, mass incarceration, antiblack stereotypes, poverty, and everyday acts of racism by placing them in the larger framework of white supremacy.
Citizen by Claudia Rankine Citizen is a book - length poem remarking on everyday moments of racism.
His career began in the 1930s, when he used the style of social realism to convey both the struggles and everyday lives of black people, shaped not only by racism but also by the Great Depression.
Alongside The Desire Project, the exhibition features a new version of the staged reading of Kilomba's book Plantation Memories (2008)-- a compilation of episodes of everyday racism written in the form of short psychoanalytical stories and testimonials told by women of African diaspora.
Factors contributing to our disadvantage are more than phantoms haunting us, they are very much alive today in the form of everyday and structural racism — the discrimination, marginalisation and substantive inequality faced by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people due to our ethnicity — the colour of our skin, and the view, implicit or explicit, that somehow our relative disadvantage in society is because of our own failure or weakness as individuals, or a result of practicing our culture.
Factors contributing to our disadvantage are more than phantoms haunting us, they are very much alive today in the form of everyday and structural racism - the discrimination, marginalisation and substantive inequality faced by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people due to our ethnicity — the colour of our skin, and the view, implicit or explicit, that somehow our relative disadvantage in society is because of our own failure or weakness as individuals, or a result of practicing our culture.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z