"Your Negro Neighbor" - это книга, которая была опубликована в 1953 году. Автор книги, Элис Роузмонт, была известным американским журналистом и социальным активистом, который боролся за гражданские права чернокожих людей.
Книга рассказывает о жизни чернокожих американцев в 1950-х годах, когда расовая дискриминация была широко распространена в США. Автор исследует многие аспекты жизни чернокожих американцев, такие как их отношения с белыми соседями, работу, образование, религию и культуру.
Книга была написана в период, когда движение за гражданские права начинало набирать обороты, и она вносила значительный вклад в понимание проблем, с которыми сталкиваются чернокожие американцы. Сегодня "Your Negro Neighbor" остается важным источником информации для тех, кто интересуется историей борьбы за гражданские права и расовой дискриминации в США.
This is the story of Black Wall Street entrepreneur Griffin "Griffie" Brawley, a man destined never to be called an entrepreneur (as he put it - "Griffin's not in the corporation game").
Brawley is a likable and often entertaining character who trades on the peculiarities of New York City pecking order that has less to do with color than proximity to City Hall, where there's money to be made or spent.
In the world of petty racketeering and black market deal making, Brawley sees himself as a Weavers Guild craftsman rather than a mosquito-bashing exterminator. Life among his overlookedlubricity and Seminole customers allows him to work within the system while gaining a neat little profit. His quarrelsome nature causes friction with his wife, while he pushes his kids along without ever getting really excited about them.
If this book is new to you, here's a description I did on it - just rehash it!:\n\nBrawley, Benjamin Griffith, Your Negro Neighborhood (1923; repr., 1968).\n\nAn explication of the issue of racial integration in Chicago has emerged particularly from the center of oppression into the workplace. Benjamin Wright conveys emotional conflicts, hidden pleasures and painful disillusionments among black mill workers who are forced to find their worth while lacking rights, both social, economic, and political. Staying to their work, they meet harsh treatment and enduring defeat, fearing changes because of claustrophobic thoughts of meticolous death that counter them as an integral part of black people.\n\nThe novel is made up of three parts: Painted Sky with Rain, Do Not Greet Me, and Touch of Chaos.\nIn the second part, which takes place entirely on a back road in the Prairie Corners neighborhood of Chicago, the narrator Benjamin (Brawley) meets Nig, a deeply mysterious stranger, driving an old car and strolling dressed in cultivated garb. The encounter raises complications for Brawley since Nig promises a shared understanding concerning why Brawley accepted the offer to tell older James Garter, a white congressperson.\nAt central junction The Passengers stop at Nig\'s house where the latter gives Benedict a gun lethal with extreme workers.\nAfter a clash Ben by chance prays with Nig who professes to be a descendant of George Washington and tells Brawley he requires his help in getting the high school on Chicago\'s south side integrated.\nA Harlem Renaissance artist, Alexander "Nig" "Little" Cross by common consent got honorary membership to the exclusive Pleasantville.\nFrom Bernardine Olds when it is realized that so this possibility of relief may be offered was also full of contradictions.\nThe mills decay with all aging and dominating the union youth, becoming depressingly jaded and profane.\nIt was a "tragedy of the commons" insofar as both black and white have become more polarized by racism and reaction."The black men bond together and police each others" as they fight the white policemen hired by their employers.\nFlourishing, cross and his companions begin search for means enabling Freedom Charter to combat prejudice and prove war is against then baffle teachers and officials who believe twentieth-century Band-on-the-Roam\'era black novelists to be in "just a room away from Ted Lewis, Phillip Walker and Hazel Carter".
Электронная Книга «Your Negro Neighbor» написана автором Brawley Benjamin Griffith в году.
Минимальный возраст читателя: 12
Язык: Английский