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Martell, Christopher C.; Stevens, Kaylene Mae – AERA Online Paper Repository, 2016
In this interpretative case study, the researchers examined the beliefs and practices of 10 self-identifying race-conscious social studies teachers. Using critical race theory as the lens, the results showed that most of the teachers made race explicit in their classrooms, included race in units not typically considered race-related, and focused…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Teacher Attitudes, Social Studies, Case Studies
Younger, Jan J.; Meussling, Vonne – 1989
Using rhetorical and historical approaches, this paper examines speech excerpts of four speakers active during the civil rights movement in the United States in the late 1960s and early 1970s. The paper's first section discusses Malcolm X and a speech delivered two months before his assassination; the second section studies James Allen speaking on…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Discourse Analysis, Modern History, Persuasive Discourse
Allen, Julia M. – 1989
Helen Forbes, in her short story "The Hunky Woman," written in 1916 for "The Masses," an eclectic Socialist magazine, undermines particular categorical propositions. By using narration with a shifting of narrative voice, Forbes calls into question the validity of the traditional teaching of argumentation. Forbes demonstrates…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Discourse Analysis, Females, Feminism
Fadely, Dean; Greene, Ronald W. – 1984
Many theoreticians have indicated that a major task of the nonpresumptive rhetor is to gain presumption, thereby shifting the burden of proof to the opposition. Rhetorically, Martin Luther King, Jr., sought to effect this shift in the burden of proof through the use of hierarchies of values. At the top of his value system was the love of God. The…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Discourse Analysis, Language Styles, Moral Issues
Heath, Robert L. – 1976
The historical rhetoric, mythic heroes, and values of the American Revolution have become the justification for many other contemporary "revolutions." Collective movements advocating states' independence, the abolition of slavery, women's rights, civil rights, and so on, have manipulated the concept of heroic equality as it is embodied…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Democratic Values, Feminism, Political Influences
Butler, Johnnella; Marable, Manning – 1974
The literature of the Negro Renaissance needs to be re-examined from the purview of the pervasiveness of the conflicts apparent in such literary themes as the tragic mulatto, the glorified and idealistic African past, the alienation from American culture, and an implied, and at times overt, self-hatred. The Renaissance literature reflects the…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Activism, Black History, Black Literature
VerLinden, Jay G. – 1987
Radical feminist Andrea Dworkin has been instrumental in efforts to curtail pornography by defining it as a violation of women's civil rights and allowing individual women to sue the distributors for damages. Dworkin's position derives from the tension between "what should be" and "what is." Her conception of the difference…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Cultural Context, Discourse Analysis, Females
Haskins, William A. – 1984
In their new roles as congressmen after the Civil War, blacks, for the first time in American history, advanced views of civil rights that reflected black perspectives. One scheme for analyzing black rhetoric suggests that black congressmen did not share the perspective held by many whites--that blacks were inept individuals. Rather, the black…
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Black History, Black Influences, Black Leadership