Throughout a person's life they will experience racial injustices. How one perceives these injustices can determine how they overcome and combat them. In “Learning to Read” a young Malcolm X writes about teaching himself to read and write while in prison. While Malcolm is reading he finds many books about the history of racial injustices throughout the world and finds the common oppressor to primarily the white man. Malcolm X uses his new found knowledge and discoveries to begin documenting the texts…
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Malcolm X’s understanding of racial identity has been a big reflection on his life as a child into adulthood which has made him become one of the greatest African American political leaders. As a child Malcolm’s father favored Malcolm for being lighter than the other children, but his mother gave him more hell for the same reason (Haley, 1964), Never the less, Malcolm considered that being light skinned was a status symbol, as was his red hair, when a comparison was mad to his brothers and sisters…
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Malcolm X The Malcolm X film by Spike Lee was a great dramatic bibliography. In this film it goes through how Malcolm lived his life until the day he died. The movie starts from Malcolm's early years as a hustler and hanging out with White people, to becoming one of the most powerful African American leaders in history. The movie shows how one person can affect so many lives and how one person can change so many things. All though the way Malcolm viewed things was not always in a positive way he…
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Malcolm X Malcolm X’s journey from a life of hardship to becoming a powerful civil rights activist serves as an example of the unstoppable power of self-empowerment and the unwavering pursuit of justice. Malcolm X’s rise to success was remarkable. He suffered many obstacles and adversities, including a violent past and systemic racism, yet he persisted with strong determination. Malcolm X’s change may be traced back to his dedication to self- education, which extended and deepened his understanding…
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and were used as slaves. While most nations outlawed slavery, America still continued with using slaves because it was free labor. It was not until the end of the Civil War on 1865 did slaves become free by the thirteenth amendment; the thirteenth amendment abolished slavery in America. The 13th amendment, however, did not abolish discrimination. For the next one-hundred years, blacks were heavily discriminated against. Due to the Jim Crow laws, they were segregated almost everywhere in the southern…
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Young? How is it different from marginalization and from powerlessness? Why does she think that the redistribution of resources will not solve problems of exploitation? Critically assess her argument. Response: Young considers exploitation when someone’s work results are used to someone else’s benefit only adding to the other’s power, and another way of wording this would be when someone uses someone unfairly to benefit themselves. She supports her definition using the example of how upper…
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Huyen Le Prof.Tracy Virgil English 163-10 Nov.14, 2014 Contrast Malcolm X’s Autobiography and Malcolm X’s movie Movies and books are different kinds of storytelling that depend on the writers and the audiences. In my view, books show more details as much as they can to draw the picture for readers. Besides that, movies have limited time, so directors have to choose details to show off and catch the notice of viewers. However, I do not think a certain one are better than another because the value…
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Admittedly, I have never been a black man. Never have I thought, “Man. It sure does suck being a straight, white man.” Therefore, being a Caucasian male of the middle class and living in rural America, I cannot relate; although, I do understand Malcolm X’s actions in this essay. Most people seem to rely on what others think of them. He wanted to eventually slick up and get a conk. He wanted to be a member of the higher class, which is neither awful nor new. No matter where a person is stationed…
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functioning in society. Looking back at one of the most influential figures of the 1960’s, it is hard to imagine that at age 21 Malcolm X tried to start a letter with “Look, daddy, let me pull your coat about a cat…” (X 256). He spent 7 years in prison for robbery, and during that time he underwent a self-metamorphosis. His way of putting it is “books opened up a whole new world to me” (260). History, philosophy, genetics and a whole dictionary all contributed to his learning process. But, as he learned…
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The Militant and The Nonviolent The names Malcolm X and Martin Luther King, Jr. are inextricably connected with the Civil Rights Movement in the United States. However each name brings different responses in the popular conscious, with an obvious example of only one being immortalized in Washington, D.C.. It is unthinkable to consider either one of these men to have anything but the best intentions in mind for their people, nonetheless both had different approaches to the movement. I think, in a…
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