Sentences with phrase «white woman portraying»

Come on, the lead actress could've been a multicultural set of nominees with both Constance Wu and Tracee Ellis Ross in the mix besides Rodriguez, just as Randall Park and Anthony Anderson in lead actor, because there's no way that's happening at the Emmys, Also, instead of Niecy Nash in supporting you've got a white woman portraying a woman of color in whiteface.

Not exact matches

But he also quotes another expert who complains that the middle - class white women are portrayed in such a cartoonish way that they don't really challenge the audience.
While watching this movie you realize how these communities are exactly like how the white suburbs are portrayed as well; you have the children causing havoc, the woman who is flaunting herself and cheating on her husband while he's off at work, and the weird «maybe gay» neighbour next door.
Much of the literary heat emanates from Emory University, where the luminaries include Joshilyn Jackson, whose Gods in Alabama portrayed a white woman returning from Chicago with a black boyfriend, and Natasha Trethewey, the 2007 Pulitzer Prize winner for poetry, who has reported about the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina on her native Gulf Coast.
Does a white woman have the right to portray the death of Emmett Till?
Because they took issue with Joe Scanlan — a white male — for masquerading as (and profiting from) Woolford, a fictitious artist portrayed by two hired black women, Jenn Kidwell and Abigal Ramsay.
Kara Walker also offers an unforgettable and disturbing comment on the horrors of slavery in an animated piece that portrays the rape of a black woman by a white man using her signature paper cut outs in the work «Ms. Pipi's Blue Tale.»
His painting «Alp on a White Background», which looks very much like a blurred photograph, portrays a person who seems to be a woman, but the name «Alp» in the title suggests the opposite.
Rawan Althomali: «Nonentity» Trois Gallery 6 - 7 p.m. Join SCAD graduate student Rawan Althomali (M.F.A. photography) as she debuts a series of stark, black and white photographs of women that portray identities both specific and obscure.
Easy for Who to Say, Simpson's work from 1989, displays five identical silhouettes of black women from the shoulders up wearing a white top that is similar to women portrayed in other of Simpson's works.
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