Results for 'Men, Black. '

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  1. Approached as a textual system, both Black Males (1983) and The Black Book (1986) catalogue a series of perspectives, vantage points and'takes' on the black male body. The first thing to notice-so obvious it goes without saying-is that all the men are nude. Each of the camera's points of view lead to a unitary vanishing point: an erotic/aesthetic objec. [REVIEW]Black Book - 1999 - In Jessica Evans & Stuart Hall (eds.), Visual culture: the reader. Thousand Oaks: SAGE Publications in association with the Open University. pp. 435.
     
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  2.  30
    Don, Betty and Jackie Kennedy: On Mad Men and Periodisation.Prudence Black & Catherine Driscoll - 2012 - Cultural Studies Review 18 (2).
    Why is it that we watch _Mad Men_ and think it represents a period? Flashes of patterned wallpaper, whiskey neat, babies born that are never mentioned, contact lining for kitchen drawers, Ayn Rand, polaroids, skinny ties, Hilton hotels, Walter Cronkite, and a time when Don Draper can ask ‘What do women want?’ and dry old Roger Sterling can reply ‘Who Cares?’ This essay explores the embrace of period detail in _Mad Men_ finding it to be both loving and fetishistic, and (...)
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  3.  14
    Ancients and Moderns in the Renaissance: Rhetoric and History in Accolti's "Dialogue on the Preeminence of Men of His Own Time".Robert Black - 1982 - Journal of the History of Ideas 43 (1):3.
  4. Desire, Drive and the Melancholy of English Football: 'It's (not) Coming Home'.Jack Black - 2023 - In Will Roberts, Stuart Whigham, Alex Culvin & Daniel Parnell (eds.), Critical Issues in Football: A Sociological Analysis of the Beautiful Game. Taylor & Francis. pp. 53--65.
    In 2021, the men’s English national football team reached their first final at a major international tournament since winning the World Cup in 1966. This success followed their previous achievement of reaching the semi-finals (knocked-out by Croatia) at the 2018 World Cup. True to form, the defeats proved unfalteringly English; with the 2021 final echoing previous tournament defeats, as England lost to Italy on penalties. However, what resonated with the predictability of an English defeat, was the accompanying chant, ‘it’s coming (...)
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  5.  13
    Hegel on War.Edward Black - 1973 - The Monist 57 (4):570-583.
    Because it is too important to be left to generals war is important enough to be studied by philosophy. The use of themselves as a force has no history and animals fight and have a history but do not wage war and make history. War takes life and creates a way of life. Don Quixote wishes to see in hell the inventor of “the dreadful fury of those devilish instruments of artillery … which is the cause that very often a (...)
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  6.  14
    The book of Leon: philosophy of a fool.Leon Black - 2017 - New York: Gallery Books. Edited by J. B. Smoove & Iris Bahr.
    Everyone's favorite houseguest who never left, Leon Black (played by award-winning comedian JB Smoove on HBO's Curb Your Enthusiasm) drops his wisdom and good-bad advice for the masses. Learn the secrets Larry David has gleaned from the Falstaff of television."--Amazon.
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  7.  9
    Science and Moral Skepticism in Hobbes.Sam Black - 1997 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 27 (2):173 - 207.
    Here lyes that mighty Man of SenseWho, full of years, departed hence,To teach the other world Intelligence,This was the prodigious Man,who vanquish’ d Pope and Puritan,By the Magic of Leviathan.Had he not Controversy wanted,His deeper Thoughts had not been scanted;Therefore good Spirits him transplant:Wise as he was, he could not tellWhether he went to Heaven or Hell.Beyond the Tenth Sphere, if there be a wide place,He'll prove by his Art there's no infinite space:And all good Angels may thank him, for (...)
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  8.  14
    Black Men From Behind the Veil: Ontological Interrogations.George Yancy (ed.) - 2021 - Lexington Books.
    Black Men from Behind the Veil bears witness to anti-Black male violence and does so from the perspective of Black male scholars who disclose their fears and what it means to suffer as Black men, courageously marking the deep material, institutional, and epistemic structures that amplify that fear and suffering.
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  9.  18
    Black Men’s Experience of Police Harassment: A Descriptive Phenomenological Study.Ania Townsell, Eric B. Vogel & Alvin McLean - 2021 - Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 52 (1):96-117.
    The Black community has a long, well-documented history of being disproportionately harassed by law enforcement. While psychological research has studied this phenomenon, more in-depth research on Black men’s lived-experience of police harassment is needed. This qualitative study used descriptive phenomenology to investigate Black men’s experience of being harassed by law enforcement officers. An analysis of non-structured interviews with a sample of four participants revealed several essential aspects of this experience, including: anxiety in response to the initial awareness of law enforcement’s (...)
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  10.  9
    Book Review: Grand Hotel Abyss: The Lives of the Frankfurt School, by Stuart Jeffries. Verso, 2016. [REVIEW]Jack Black - 2019 - Rethinking Marxism: A Journal of Economics, Culture and Society 31 (4):532-535.
    This review considers Stuart Jeffries’s Grand Hotel Abyss: The Lives of the Frankfurt School. Providing a detailed account of the work and lives of the Frankfurt School, Jeffries is commended for his ability to present an illustrative biography of the school’s members and associates as well as the variety of topics that their work engaged with. However, while Jefferies manages to merge biography and academic theory in a readable and at times detailed and engaging narrative, such work is undermined by (...)
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  11.  23
    Advancing independent adolescent consent for participation in HIV prevention research.Seema K. Shah, Susannah M. Allison, Bill G. Kapogiannis, Roberta Black, Liza Dawson & Emily Erbelding - 2018 - Journal of Medical Ethics 44 (7):431-433.
    In many regions around the world, those at highest risk for acquiring HIV are young adults and adolescents. Young men who have sex with men in the USA are the group at greatest risk for HIV acquisition, particularly if they are part of a racial or ethnic minority group.1 Adolescent girls and young women have the highest incidence rates of any demographic subgroup in sub-Saharan Africa.2 To reverse the global AIDS pandemic’s toll on these high-risk groups, it is important to (...)
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  12.  15
    “Men don’t cry”: An Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis of Black South African Men’s Experience of Divorce.Kudakwashe C. Muchena, Greg Howcroft & Louise A. Stroud - 2018 - Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology 18 (2):133-144.
    The decision to divorce marks a turning point for every individual involved. It can be viewed as more than just a legal process. From a psychological perspective, it does not matter who initiated the divorce, since it always comes with emotional ramifications for all those involved. Statistically, there is a high rate of divorce in South Africa and there have been significant shifts in trends over time. While black South African men’s experience of divorce has been relatively neglected in the (...)
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  13.  71
    Do Black men have a moral duty to marry Black women?Charles W. Mills - 1994 - Journal of Social Philosophy 25 (s1):131-153.
  14.  2
    The Black Death and Men of LearningAnna Montgomery Campbell.C. D. Leake - 1932 - Isis 18 (1):195-197.
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  15.  18
    Do the Marriageable Men want to Protect and Provide? The Expectation of Black Professional Hybrid Masculinity.Marbella Eboni Hill - 2022 - Gender and Society 36 (4):498-524.
    Gender ideologies are embedded in intersecting race, class, and gender systems. Yet Black masculinity is often defined one-dimensionally, without attention to class variation in gender enactment. Particularly, with regard to heterosexual partnering, representations of Black masculinity most often involve men enacting compensatory displays to account for having too little masculine capital to meet the dominant culture’s protector–provider prerequisites for accomplishing marital masculinity. Drawing from interviews with 42 never-married Black professional men, I explore their ideas about how masculinity ought to be (...)
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  16.  9
    “Much Learning Makes Men Mad”: Classical Education and Black Empowerment in Martin R. Delany's Philosophy of Education.Tunde Adeleke - 2015 - Journal of Thought 49 (1-2):3.
  17.  15
    “Always leading our men in service and sacrifice”:: Amy Jacques Garvey, feminist Black nationalist.Karen S. Adler - 1992 - Gender and Society 6 (3):346-375.
    This article focuses on the most important woman in Garveyism: Amy Jacques Garvey, Marcus Garvey's second wife. Amy Jacques Garvey's true value in the Garvey movement has rarely been acknowledged; most authors and scholars have misleadingly depicted her as Marcus's “helpmate.” This article proposes that Amy Jacques Garvey was a key architect of Garveyism and a lifelong advocate of social justice in her own right. The author also examines the relationship among race, class, and gender as it pertains to Amy (...)
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  18.  9
    War on Black Men: Arguments for the Legalization of Drugs.Walter E. Block & Violet Obioha - 2012 - Criminal Justice Ethics 31 (2):106-120.
    Abstract The leadership of the black community is concerned with welfare, with equality, with unemployment, with discrimination, with racism, with the pay gap, and with dozens of other such traditional issues. Oh, yes, they are also apprehensive about the use of addictive drugs. But, as we speak, young male members of this community are being incarcerated at frightful rates, and, even worse, are killing each other to boot. One would think that this latter issue would occupy the interest of black (...)
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  19.  20
    The Woman in Black: Exposing Sexist Beliefs About Female Officials in Elite Men’s Football.Carwyn Jones & Lisa Louise Edwards - 2013 - Sport, Ethics and Philosophy 7 (2):202-216.
    In this paper, we argue that there are important differences between playing and non-playing roles in sport. The relevance of sex differences poses genuine philosophical and ethical difficulties for feminism in the context of playing sport. In the case of non-playing roles in general, and officiating in particular, we argue that reference to essential differences between men and women is irrelevant. Officiating elite men?s football is not a role for which ?essential? (psychological and biological) differences are causally implicated neither in (...)
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  20. A Man Among Other Men: The Crisis of Black Masculinity in Racial Capitalism.[author unknown] - 2022
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  21. Finding the voices of Black women and men.Melvina Johnson Young - 1993 - In Stanlie Myrise James & Abena P. A. Busia (eds.), Theorizing black feminisms: the visionary pragmatism of Black women. New York: Routledge.
     
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  22.  16
    Stigma and Status: Interracial Intimacy and Intersectional Identities among Black College Men.Amy C. Wilkins - 2012 - Gender and Society 26 (2):165-189.
    In this article, I use in-depth interviews with Black college students at two predominantly white universities to investigate the coconstruction of race, gender, and sexuality, and to examine intersectional identities as a dynamic process rather than bounded identity. I focus on Black college men’s talk about interracial relationships. Existing research documents Black women’s angry reactions to interracial relationships, but for Black men, interracial relationships present both problems and opportunities. I examine how Black men use two distinct forms of interracial talk— (...)
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  23.  20
    Your blues ain't like mine: considering integrative antiracism in HIV prevention research with black men who have sex with men in C anada and the U nited S tates.LaRon E. Nelson, Ja'Nina J. Walker, Steve N. DuBois & Sulaimon Giwa - 2014 - Nursing Inquiry 21 (4):270-282.
    Evidence‐based interventions have been developed and used to prevent HIV infections among black men who have sex with men (MSM) in Canada and the United States; however, the degree to which interventions address racism and other interlocking oppressions that influence HIV vulnerability is not well known. We utilize integrative antiracism to guide a review of HIV prevention intervention studies with black MSM and to determine how racism and religious oppression are addressed in the current intervention evidence base. We searched CINAHL, (...)
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  24.  29
    In the Company of Black Men: The African Influence on African American Culture in New York City by Craig Steven Wilder.David E. McClean - 2003 - Philosophia Africana 6 (1):80-84.
  25.  39
    The Black Death and Men of Learning. [REVIEW]Major L. Younce - 1933 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 8 (1):149-151.
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  26.  19
    In search of black men's masculinities.Marlon B. Ross - 1998 - Feminist Studies 24 (3):599-626.
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  27.  22
    The cultural halo effect: Black and white women rate black and white men.M. J. Intons-Peterson & Arlene K. Samuels - 1978 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 11 (5):309-312.
  28.  34
    The Lived Experience of Discrimination of White Women in Committed Interracial Relationships with Black Men.Anina van der Walt & Pieter Basson - 2015 - Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology 15 (2):1-16.
    Adopting a descriptive phenomenological approach, this study explores the experiences of discrimination of white women in committed interracial relationships with black men within the South African context. Three white females in committed interracial relationships with black males were recruited and interviewed. Open-ended interviews were conducted in order to elicit rich and in-depth first-person descriptions of the participants’ lived experiences of discrimination as a result of being in committed interracial relationships. The data analysis entailed a descriptive phenomenological content analysis and description. (...)
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  29.  3
    Of the training of Black men.W. E. B. DuBois - unknown
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  30. He Wasn’t Man Enough: Black Male Studies and the Ethnological Targeting of Black Men in 19th Century Suffragist Thought.Tommy J. Curry - 2021 - In African American Studies. Edinburgh, UK: pp. 209-224.
  31. Decolonizing the Intersection: Black Male Studies as a Critique of Intersectionality’s Indebtedness to Subculture of Violence Theory.Tommy J. Curry - 2021 - In Robert Beshara (ed.), Critical Psychology Praxis: Psychosocial Non-Alignment to Modernity/Coloniality. New York: pp. 132-154.
    Intersectionality has utilized various feminist theories that continue subculture of violence thinking about Black men and boys. While intersectional feminists often claim that intersectionality leads to a clearer social analysis of power and hierarchies throughout society and within groups, the categories and claims of intersectionality fail to distinguish themselves from previously racist theories that sought to explain race, class, and gender, based on subcultural values. This article is the first to interrogate the theories used to construct the gendered categories and (...)
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  32.  31
    Making Black Femicide Visible.Shatema Threadcraft - 2021 - Philosophical Topics 49 (1):35-44.
    Black women struggle to make the violence they experience visible for at least four reasons: the violence occurs in private, not in public; it is associated with sex, sexuality and intimacy; the violence is not amplified within the public and counterpublic spheres; and, finally and importantly, activists have not been as successful in constructing resonate narratives regarding the violence. Contemporary violence against black men, for example, is often understood through the lens of lynching, a phenomenon that earlier activists were able (...)
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  33.  16
    Pol Grymonprez, ed., “Here men may se the vertues off herbes”: A Middle English Herbal . Brussels: OMIREL, 1981. Paper. Pp. 148; many facsimile plates in black-and-white. [REVIEW]Henry Hargreaves - 1982 - Speculum 57 (3):684.
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  34.  3
    Black women’s bodies as sacrificial lambs at the altar.Sandisele L. Xhinti & Hundzukani P. Khosa-Nkatini - 2023 - HTS Theological Studies 79 (1):7.
    The youth in South Africa are subject to unemployment and the pressure to fit into society. The unemployment rate in South Africa is high; therefore, some find themselves desperate for employment and often find themselves hoping and praying for a miracle; hence, the number of churches in South Africa is increasing. People go to church to be prayed for by ministers in a hope to better their lives and that of their families. Some of these young South Africans became victims (...)
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  35.  13
    Ubuntu relational love: decolonizing Black masculinities.Devi Dee Mucina - 2019 - Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada: University of Manitoba Press.
    Ubuntu is a Bantu term meaning humanity. It is also a philosophical and ethical system of thought, from which definitions of humanness, togetherness, and social politics of difference arise. Devi Dee Mucina is a Black Indigenous Ubuntu man. In Ubuntu Relational Love, he uses Ubuntu oratures as tools to address the impacts of Euro-colonialism while regenerating relational Ubuntu governance structures. Called "millet granaries" to reflect the nourishing and sustaining nature of Indigenous knowledges, and written as letters addressed to his mother, (...)
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  36.  5
    The (non) accumulation of capital: Explicating the relationship of structure and agency in the lives of poor Black men.Alford A. Young - 1999 - Sociological Theory 17 (2):201-227.
    The concepts of habitus and capital are crucial in the research tradition of social and cultural reproduction. This article applies both terms to an analysis of aspects of the life histories of low-income African American men. In exploring how their past experiences relate to their present-day statuses as nonmobile individuals, this article also revisits and redefines the utility of habitus and capital as conceptual devices for the study of social inequality. It expands the empirical terrain covered by the concept of (...)
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  37.  36
    In Search of Black Men's MasculinitiesSpeak My Name: Black Men on Masculinity and the American DreamRepresenting Black MenAre We Not Men? Masculine Anxiety and the Problem of African-American Identity. [REVIEW]Marlon B. Ross, Don Belton, Marcellus Blount, George P. Cunningham & Phillip Brian Harper - 1998 - Feminist Studies 24 (3):599.
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  38. Taking it to the People: Translating Empirical Findings about Black Men and Black Families to 21st Century Black Americans.Tommy J. Curry - 2018 - Journal of Dewey Studies 1 (2):42-71.
  39.  3
    Book Review: Sweet Tea: Black Gay Men of the South: An Oral History. By E. Patrick Johnson. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2008, 584 pp., $35.00. [REVIEW]Harry Thomas - 2009 - Gender and Society 23 (6):839-840.
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  40. Candide Shoots the Monkey Lovers: Representing Black Men in Eighteenth-Century French Visual Culture.Mary L. Bellhouse - 2006 - Political Theory 34 (6):741-784.
    This essay analyzes a shift in racialized regimes of visual signification in French metropolitan culture during the long eighteenth century. The author explores two symbolically central figures—the dismembered black slave and the black rapist/lover who is “duly punished”—by undertaking an intertextual reading of two sets of illustrations of Voltaire's Candide (1759) designed by Moreau le Jeune. Separated by the French and Haitian Revolutions, Moreau's two sets of Candide illustrations (1787 and 1803) register an important shift in the French cultural imaginary. (...)
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  41.  15
    Pathologizing Black bodies: the legacy of plantation slavery.Constante González Groba - 2023 - London: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group. Edited by Ewa Barbara Luczak & Urszula Niewiadomska-Flis.
    Pathologizing Black Bodies reconsiders the black body as a site of cultural and corporeal interchange; one involving violence and oppression, leaving memory and trauma sedimented in cultural conventions, political arrangements, social institutions and, most significantly, materially and symbolically engraved upon the body, with "the self" often deprived of agency and sovereignty. Consisting of three sections, this text focuses on works of the 20th and 21st century fiction and cultural narratives by mainly African American authors, aiming to highlight the different ways (...)
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  42.  4
    Motivational correlates of real to ideal occupational aspiration shifts among black and white men and women.Lawrence W. Littig - 1979 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 13 (4):227-229.
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  43.  51
    White Skin, Black Friend: A Fanonian application to theorize racial fetish in teacher education.Cheryl E. Matias - 2016 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 48 (3).
    In Black Skin, white masks, Franz Fanon uses a psychoanalytic framework to theorize the inferiority-dependency complex of Black men in response to the colonial racism of white men. Applying his framework in reverse, this theoretical article psychoanalyzes the white psyche and emotionality with respect to the racialization process of whites and their racial attachment to Blackness. Positing that such a process is interconnected with narcissism, humanistic emptiness, and psychosis, this article presents how racial attachment becomes racial fetish. Such a fetish (...)
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  44.  14
    Black Women and Mental Health: Working towards Inclusive Mental Health Services.Melba Wilson - 2001 - Feminist Review 68 (1):34-51.
    The position concerning the mental health of black and minority ethnic women in Britain is closely linked to that of their respective communities in general. Issues concerning inappropriate care and treatment; lack of access to services; and service delivery based on assumptions and stereotypes govern the way in which black women and men experience mental health care and treatment. This article discusses the specific nature of black women's position, within the wider context of black communities’ experience as a whole. While (...)
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  45. Black Women In Fanon's Black Skin, White Masks.Ming Wahl Emma - 2021 - Stance 14:40-52.
    In this paper, I focus on the representations of Black women in contrast to Black men found within Frantz Fanon’s philosophical work Black Skin, White Masks. I propose that while Fanon’s racial dialectical work is very significant, he often lacks acknowledgement of the multidimensionality of the Black woman’s lived experience specifically. Drawing on the theory of intersectionality, coined by Kimberlé Crenshaw, I argue that Fanon does not recognize the different layers of oppression operating in Black women’s lives to the degree (...)
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  46.  22
    Men in the Home: Everyday Practices of Gender in Twentieth-Century India.Gyanendra Pandey - 2020 - Feminist Studies 46 (2):403-430.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Feminist Studies 46, no. 2. © 2020 by Feminist Studies, Inc. 403 Gyanendra Pandey Men in the Home: Everyday Practices of Gender in Twentieth-Century India This article responds to a call by feminist historians of South Asia to attend to the “complex experience of family” as conditioned by age, gender, and class, and the ordinary “daily practices of gender” in the domestic arena.1 My essay focuses on the comparatively (...)
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  47.  10
    Perception in Black Mirror.Brian Stiltner & Anna Vaughn - 2019 - In David Kyle Johnson (ed.), Black Mirror and Philosophy. Hoboken, NJ, USA: Wiley. pp. 311–319.
    Black Mirror is full of technologies that manipulate people's sensory perceptions. Philosophers of perception explain that our brains actively construct what we sense based on previous knowledge, expectations, and emotions, without us even being aware of this framing. Many Black Mirror episodes illustrate the mistakes that people can make when they misunderstand this framing process. Some episodes suggest that highly effective virtual reality technology could foil the strategies that Descartes recommended for distinguishing hallucinations and dreams from reality. Yet other episodes (...)
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  48.  6
    Black Male Fiction and the Legacy of Caliban.James W. Coleman & James William Coleman - 2001
    "This study challenges those who argue for the liberating possibilities of the postmodern narrative, as Coleman reveals the pervasiveness of the Calibanic image and its tremendous influence."--BOOK JACKET.
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  49.  8
    Hope Draped in Black: Decolonizing Utopian Studies.Caroline Edwards - 2024 - Utopian Studies 34 (3):498-509.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Hope Draped in Black: Decolonizing Utopian StudiesCaroline Edwards (bio)What does utopian studies have to learn from critical race theory, Black studies, and ideas of Black futurity? While utopian scholars have begun unpicking the colonial entanglements of utopianism’s origins (particularly as a literary genre grounded in pelagic crossings to the New World that have advocated slavery, extractivism, and eugenics to name a few notable examples across the utopian canon), few, (...)
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  50.  19
    Black Women in Fanon's Black Skin, White Masks.Emma Ming Wahl - 2021 - Stance 14 (1):41-51.
    In this paper, I focus on the representations of Black women in contrast to Black men found within Frantz Fanon’s philosophical work Black Skin, White Masks. I propose that while Fanon’s racial dialectical work is very significant, he often lacks acknowledgment of the multidimensionality of the Black woman’s lived experience specifically. Drawing on the theory of intersectionality, coined by Kimberlé Crenshaw, I argue that Fanon does not recognize the different layers of oppression operating in Black women’s lives to the degree (...)
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