 | Margaret Mansfield - Study Aids - 1971 - 80 pages
Cliffs Notes provide you with the combined efforts of teachers, writers, and editors who've studied, taught, and analyzed what 'Black Like Me' means to literature as a whole ... | |
 | Barbara Trepagnier - Social Science - 2006 - 181 pages
Vivid and engaging, Silent Racismpersuasively demonstrates that silent racism - racism by people who classify themselves as "not racist" - is instrumental in the production of ... | |
 | Lillian Eugenia Smith - Social Science - 1994 - 253 pages
A documentary of the destructive powers of segregation and apathy as written from the experiences and insights of a Southerner | |
 | Grace Halsell - 1969 - 211 pages
The journal of a white woman who turned herself black and went to live and work in Harlem and Mississippi. | |
 | Keith Weldon Medley - Social Science - 2003 - 252 pages
Details the events leading to and including the Supreme Court case which legalized segregation, beginning when Homer Plessy decided to sit in a railway car designated for ... | |
 | Tim Wise - Social Science - 2010 - 438 pages
Flipping John Howard Griffin's classic Black Like Me, and extending Noel Ignatiev's How The Irish Became White into the present-day, Wise explores the meanings and consequences ... | |
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