YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Economic Self Sufficiency and the Role of the African American Church
Essays 691 - 720
In eleven pages this paper compares each author's uses of vernacular to reflect African American identity concept in their respect...
In three pages this African literary epic is examined in terms of its themes of kingship and society with topics including artisti...
This 5 page paper discusses the struggles African-Americans face as they move from a rural setting to an urban one, as portrayed i...
then her family and has been divorcing herself from them for quite sometime. When Dee arrives she is decked out in bright...
In seven pages this paper contrasts and compares these literary works regarding the lasting impressions of the slave experience up...
In six pages the enslavement of African American females as depicted in Zora Neale Hurston's Their Eyes Were Watching God, Toni Mo...
were taught to value honor, education, equality, and the importance of telling the truth. Parks childhood instilled in him a fierc...
In nine pages this paper compares the incidence rates between Caucasian and African American men regarding prostate cancer. Five ...
percent, while rates among black women increase 1 percent, says the National Cancer Institute). Although White women are more li...
In five pages environmental factors such as carcinogens exposure are discussed as they relate to the high breast cancer mortality ...
continue to rise" (Hanke, 1993, pp. 22). Baltimore set an unenviable record for the number of homicides in 1992 of 331, which...
Troy and his son Cory. August Wilson establishes an impression of the 53-year-old Troy Maxson early in Act I, writing that he ...
endured by Black People during various eras. Research I uncovered focuses much on the Harlem Renaissance, the Black Arts Poets, an...
In six pages this paper examines Langston Hughes' African American poetry and the common theme that is interwoven in poems like 'H...
In six pages this paper examines how the African American experience manifests itself in Langston Hughes' plays Mulatto and Don't ...
The writer compares and contrasts the lives and work of Harriet Jacobs and Booker T. Washington, and the prejudice they faced beca...
In five pages this paper focuses mostly on Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass in a consideration of the African American ...
whites. Washington also felt that this was completely possible, and that in fact when white workers saw that the blacks in no way ...
This paper takes an Afro-Centric perspective in discussing the film, Sankosa, and its impact on modern-day African-Americans. Thi...
This paper examines the relevance of the film, Sankosa, and others like it that focus on African-Americans holding onto their heri...
In five pages this research paper considers how music and artistic influences of African Americans have been significant since the...
In five pages this research paper assesses the artistic and musical contributions of African Americans throughout history in the m...
society (Nogueira; Bours). The considerable creativity of these people was channeled solely into outlets such as the chant, danc...
172). But while modernism was a reaction to the modern age and the disassociation that came with it, there also seems to have been...
In five pages 'The Negro Speaks of Rivers' and 'Dream Deferred' poems of Langston Hughes are compared in a discussion of brutal re...
In five pages this essay examines whether or not the widespread scattering of African Americans throughout the world makes it poss...
hiding ones true race be significant? Two points must be made in order to answer this question. First, the literature of the Harl...
In nine pages this research paper considers this African American novelist, poet, and lecturer in terms of her life and work with ...
In five pages this paper considers the life and activism of Ida B. Wells on behalf of African American oppression. Six sources ar...
In fifteen pages this research paper examines South Carolina in a consideration of the impact of the Northern migration of souther...