[MOFATEOAGD C9 the comfort blanket, epilogue]
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[MOFATEOAGD C9 the comfort blanket, epilogue]
Hello! How come I jus a know bout dis #BookPhoneChallenge ➡️ #EsoterismAndSymbol #AfricaMotherOfWesternCivilization #TheMasterKey #WretchedOfTheEarth #ThePhilosophyAndOpinionsOfMarcusGarvey #TheGoddessBlackWoman 📚
Cliterati/Annapura/Warp Chamber/Wretched of the earth - The Cobra Lounge Portland, OR
#BlackAugustFilm documentary film Concerning Violence deep look at the word of #FrantzFanon #WretchedoftheEarth commemorate #blackaugust TONIGHT at #StrategyandSoul 3546 w Martin Luther King.
Finally getting around to reading this! #frantzfanon #wretchedoftheearth #requiredreading
I'm total geeking out over my gift from #lewisgordon! I can't wait to read this and perhaps follow with a re read of #frantzfanon #wretchedoftheearth American philosopher Lewis Ricardo Gordon (born 1962) is an American philosopher who works in the areas of Africana philosophy, philosophy of human and life sciences, phenomenology, philosophy of existence, social and political theory, postcolonial thought, theories of race and racism, philosophies of liberation, aesthetics, philosophy of education, and philosophy of religion. He has written particularly extensively on race and racism, postcolonial phenomenology, Africana and black existentialism, and on the works and thought of W. E. B. Du Bois and Frantz Fanon. #diannesmith #diannesmithart (at University of Montevallo)
Ahh, thank you! I guess I was a little wrong in terms of occupation (but Chris Rock does write music so ... only sort of wrong?), but I have such a bad memory for names I'm honestly surprised I even got that much "right". If anybody's interested, we were reading Origins of the Urban Crisis, about racial segregation post-WW2 in Detroit, and one section of the book was specifically talking about how the black "pioneers" into middle-class/upper-class mostly-white neighborhoods were generally speaking significantly more affluent than their white counterparts, as well as better educated. (It's a very good book, by Thomas Sugrue, though at times very hard to read, in part because he uses a lot of primary source quotes that include some pretty nasty slurs).