But the script is weak, and there's something distasteful and dispiriting about
the way class prejudices are blithely accepted and even embraced.
Not exact matches
Not only is this patronising, but it demonstrates your own
prejudices, in contrast to Harriet Harman's understanding of the
way that the
class system undermines many women.
Denzel Washington stars in and directs this inspiring drama about a college professor who challenges the entrenched racism and
prejudice of the 1930's by assembling and training a first -
class African - American debate team, a talented group that makes its
way to a national championship against Harvard University.
I'm not referring to the predictable meltdown of sticking Nicole Richie and Paris Hilton in the middle of the Ozarks, but rather the
way in which our own
prejudices about the extremes of
class are manipulated with calculated cruelty.
This first act is a tight piece of storytelling about the
way Briony's flights of fancy become the fodder for harmful gossip mongering and a concise look at
class structure and the
prejudices that arise from it.
In a psychology
class I took I learned that one of the most effective
ways to end
prejudice towards certain groups is to expose the
prejudiced person to that group more frequently.