The Blog
About
the facts of whiteness
Examining whiteness through the black gaze
Essays
Introduction
Fanon and hooks
The Black Gaze
Critical Race Theory and White Supremacy
How I came to be white, my facts of whiteness
“Nigger”
Culture
Black Cinema: Free PowerPoint Presentation
African American Artist: Charles W. White, Jr.
The Harlem Renaissance
Reggae and The Influence of Music
Fela Kuti and Afrobeat
Booklist & Weblinks
About the Author
How I came to be white, my facts of whiteness
The Blog
The Blog
Home
The Blog
Page 27
‘The spook who sat by the door’, 1973: Film About the First Black Man in the C.I.A
+ Read More
Romare Bearden
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Z1A-OIibPM
+ Read More
Sir Lloyd Coxsone – leaving Jamaica
+ Read More
Funmilayo Ransome Kuti
+ Read More
Music Matters – Robert Johnson: the story of Johnson’s famous ‘deal with the devil’
+ Read More
Serge Mouangue Camerooian Artist and Japanese art fusion
+ Read More
New book on LKJ
+ Read More
Nina Simone interview with Mavis Nicholson
+ Read More
William Monroe Trotter
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F3j_euvvh_Q
+ Read More
The Niagara Movement
+ Read More
1
…
25
26
27
28
29
…
40
Join the debate
Follow me on
Recent Posts
James is an incredible re-writing of Mark Twain’s 1884 American classic The Adventures of Huckleberry Fin that tells the story from the perspective of the enslaved Jim
Armed and Unafraid: The Story of the Deacons for Defense
Pata Seca
From Slavery to Freedom: The Untold Story of America’s First Muslims.Yarrow Mamout, natively known as Mamadou Yarrow, was a Guinean freedman, entrepreneur, and property owner in Georgetown, Washington, D.C. An educated Fulani Muslim, he gained his freedom in 1796 after 44 years held in bondage From Slavery to Freedom: The Untold Story of America’s First Muslims.
Una Marson: The Jamaican Feminist, Writer, Poet, Playwright and Radio Pioneer
Categories
film
literature
music
observations
Tags
50s
70s
90s
1950s
bob marley
cinema
fashion
film
foreign policy
hip hop
Hollywood
jazz
masculinity
NY
public enemy
reggae
slavery
spike Lee
steve mcqueen
terror
Tweets by @Den_Fabrizi