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Pages
- Title
- " ... To do credit to my nation, wherever I go" : West Indian and Cape Verdean immigrants in Southeastern New England, 1890-1940
- Creator
- Edwards, Janelle Marlena
- Date
- 2018
- Collection
- Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Description
-
This work is a community study that centers the experiences of black immigrants as an overlapping diaspora in multi-ethnic and transnational African-American history. It argues that, through the operationalization of their familial networks, ethnic organizations, and neighborhood enclaves, black immigrants in New England depart from traditional histories of assimilation and acculturation. Though much scholarship has been dedicated to the politically charged organizations and black immigrant...
Show moreThis work is a community study that centers the experiences of black immigrants as an overlapping diaspora in multi-ethnic and transnational African-American history. It argues that, through the operationalization of their familial networks, ethnic organizations, and neighborhood enclaves, black immigrants in New England depart from traditional histories of assimilation and acculturation. Though much scholarship has been dedicated to the politically charged organizations and black immigrant participation in New York, this microhistory of Southeastern New England's port cities -- Providence and New Bedford--demonstrates the commonplace, quotidian lives of West Indians and Cape Verdeans as neighbors, friends, and relatives who experienced and adapted to their diaspora condition differently. While West Indians altered their community landscape and eventually assimilated into the African-American community, Cape Verdeans retained a Cape Verdean ethnic identity, bolstered by their transnational shipping fleet and the constant flow of people, goods, and ideas from the homeland.
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- Title
- "'Can you imagine anything more Australian?'" Bruce Beresford's "Breaker Morant"
- Creator
- Gardner Susan (Susan Jane)
- Date
- 1981-03
- Collection
- Critical Arts
- Title
- "'I'm gone be 'Black on both sides'" : examining the literacy practices and legacy learning within a sustaining urban debate community
- Creator
- Jones Stanbrough, Raven
- Date
- 2016
- Collection
- Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Description
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"This study explored the lived experiences of Black student-debaters and debate supporters in ACTION Debate (AD), an afterschool debate program dedicated to offering and providing debate opportunities and instruction to high school students in a major Midwestern city." -- Abstract.
- Title
- "'Invading vacationland for Christ' : the construction of evangelical identity through summer camps in the postwar era"
- Creator
- Koerselman, Rebecca A.
- Date
- 2013
- Collection
- Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Description
-
Evangelical summer camps blossomed in the post–World War II years, more than tripling their numbers from 1945 to 1960. But scholars have yet to explain the phenomenon at this critical juncture in American history. Summer camps provide a lens for how evangelicals saw themselves in an increasingly secular postwar world. Many believed the influence of evangelicals was on the decline, and scholars have indicated the overall waning of the influence of mainline Protestant denominations...
Show moreEvangelical summer camps blossomed in the post–World War II years, more than tripling their numbers from 1945 to 1960. But scholars have yet to explain the phenomenon at this critical juncture in American history. Summer camps provide a lens for how evangelicals saw themselves in an increasingly secular postwar world. Many believed the influence of evangelicals was on the decline, and scholars have indicated the overall waning of the influence of mainline Protestant denominations throughout the twentieth century. But an examination of summer camps reveals that evangelicals desired to engage in mainstream culture through reaching American postwar youth. They consciously worked to influence America's youth in unprecedented ways, appealing to them through the combination of faith and fun, working to attract the growing teenage subculture in order to create and sustain the next generation of evangelical leadership. Summer camps, an innovative approach to reaching America's youth, aided evangelicals as they sought to reassert both a Christian and American identity in the postwar milieu of anxiety and change. The establishment of evangelical summer camps in the 1940s and 1950s demonstrated a clear resurgence of evangelical power. This evangelical power, building on the organizational foundation of the 1940s and 1950s, continued its trajectory into the national spotlight and cultural significance in the late twentieth and early twenty first century. The examination of the diversity of evangelical summer camps through broader historical lenses provides a variety of different ways to unearth how evangelicals went from a sheltered group that supposedly disappeared in the 1920s to their visibility and influence of today. An exploration of the continuing influence of denominational institutions as well as the growing evidence of non–denominational camps revealed the extent to which postwar evangelicals struggled to neatly identify as liberal, modern, or more conservative. An investigation of the construction of gender–based identities explains how evangelicals sometimes fit with existing gender norms, but also the ways they pushed against traditional gender roles by encouraging girls to pursue evangelical careers. A consideration of the issues of race and environmentalism indicates the immense diversity within evangelicalism during the postwar era. Finally, the exploration of the voices of evangelical youth exposes a language of political activism. Evangelical youth believed they were the solution to the world’s problems and that missionizing, political involvement, establishing more Christian institutions, and pursuing world peace were what evangelicals should care about.
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- Title
- "A bit on the side"? Gender struggles in the politics of transformation in South Africa
- Creator
- Hassim, Shireen
- Date
- 1987
- Collection
- Transformation : Critical Perspectives on Southern Africa
- Title
- "A bit on the side"? Gender struggles in the politics of transformation in South Africa
- Creator
- Singh, Ratnamala
- Date
- 1988
- Collection
- Transformation : Critical Perspectives on Southern Africa
- Title
- "A black coup" : Inkatha and the sale of Ilanga
- Creator
- Gillwald, Alison
- Date
- 1988
- Collection
- Transformation : Critical Perspectives on Southern Africa
- Description
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The black press in South Africa influences hundreds of thousands of readers in English and indigenous languages. The author considers the Durban-based and Inkatha-owned newspaper Ilanga and how it appears to succeed despite the political odds.
- Title
- "A call to honor" : Rebecca Latimer Felton and white supremacy
- Creator
- Hess, Mary A.
- Date
- 1999
- Collection
- Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Title
- "A challenge and a promise" : the political activities of Detroit clubwomen in the 1920s
- Creator
- Morris-Crowther, Jayne
- Date
- 2001
- Collection
- Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Title
- "A crowd of solitudes" : the social poetry of James Wright
- Creator
- Schulte, Raphael J.
- Date
- 1992
- Collection
- Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Title
- "A dialogue with unreason" : the critical history of Edgar Allan Poe's The narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym, 1838-1993
- Creator
- Harvey, Ronald C. (Ronald Clark)
- Date
- 1995
- Collection
- Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Title
- "A different kind of failure" : rupture, transfiguration and the future of indeterminacy in modern drama
- Creator
- Norman, Lance
- Date
- 2007
- Collection
- Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Title
- "A free ballot and a fair count" : the Department of Justice and the enforcement of voting rights in the South, 1877-1893
- Creator
- Goldman, Robert Michael
- Date
- 1976
- Collection
- Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Title
- "A good defense will leave you beautiful, a bad defense will make you ugly" : gender in Muay Thai kickboxing
- Creator
- Glogower, Naomi Bracha
- Date
- 2009
- Collection
- Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Title
- "A histoy of telecommunication: the telegraph" : an instructional unit for television
- Creator
- Bopry, Jeanette
- Date
- 1978
- Collection
- Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Title
- "A liberal of another colour"
- Creator
- Lodge, Tom, 1951-
- Date
- 1991
- Collection
- Transformation : Critical Perspectives on Southern Africa
- Description
-
Robert Sobukwe is one of the Africanist heroes of South Africa. The author is convinced by the new biography of Sobukwe written by Benjamin Pogrund that he was importantly a liberal.
- Title
- "A more excellent way : " developing coalitions and consensus through informal networking
- Creator
- Gilchrist, Alison (Independent community development consultant)
- Date
- 1998
- Collection
- Journal of Social Development in Africa
- Title
- "A nation can rise no higher than its women" : the critical role of Black Muslim women in the development and purveyance of Black consciousness, 1945 - 1975
- Creator
- Jeffries, Bayyinah Sharief
- Date
- 2009
- Collection
- Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Title
- "A place to call home" : the rhetoric of Filipinx-American place-making
- Creator
- Mahnke, Stephanie
- Date
- 2019
- Collection
- Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Description
-
In this dissertation, I analyze the place-making efforts of the Philippine American Cultural Center of Michigan, a space for Detroit's Filipinx community. By looking at the place-making process from the center's earliest conception to later development, this study aims to determine the negotiations and factors that influence the production and sustainment of space based on the group's cultural ideology. To gather and analyze data, I coded the center's planning minutes from 1980 to 2001,...
Show moreIn this dissertation, I analyze the place-making efforts of the Philippine American Cultural Center of Michigan, a space for Detroit's Filipinx community. By looking at the place-making process from the center's earliest conception to later development, this study aims to determine the negotiations and factors that influence the production and sustainment of space based on the group's cultural ideology. To gather and analyze data, I coded the center's planning minutes from 1980 to 2001, followed by interviews with members of the original planning committee and center's leaders. All findings are validated by the community through the Filipinx indigenous interviewing method of pagtatanung-tanung. Through analysis of the documents and interviews, I conclude the distinct rhetoric of this center's Filipinx-American place-making is a result of negotiated Filipinx values to prioritize beliefs in unity and reciprocity, creating a materially and symbolically malleable cultural center to accommodate different forms of members' "giving back". Results of the study may inform cultural rhetoricians' methodology and fuller treatment of place-making as a rhetorical process, and community organizers of the importance of accounting for distinct cultural ideologies which influence place-making efforts.
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- Title
- "A ray of hope for liberation" : blacks in the South Carolina Extension Service, 1915-1970
- Creator
- Harris, Carmen Veneita
- Date
- 2002
- Collection
- Electronic Theses & Dissertations