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Slaves To Racism An Unbroken Chain From America To Liberia Benjamin G Dennis

  • SKU: BELL-1399326
Slaves To Racism An Unbroken Chain From America To Liberia Benjamin G Dennis
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Slaves To Racism An Unbroken Chain From America To Liberia Benjamin G Dennis instant download after payment.

Publisher: Algora Publishing
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.19 MB
Pages: 265
Author: Benjamin G. Dennis, Anita K. Dennis
ISBN: 9780875866574, 9780875866581, 9780875866598, 0875866573, 0875866581, 087586659X
Language: English
Year: 2008

Product desciption

Slaves To Racism An Unbroken Chain From America To Liberia Benjamin G Dennis by Benjamin G. Dennis, Anita K. Dennis 9780875866574, 9780875866581, 9780875866598, 0875866573, 0875866581, 087586659X instant download after payment.

Slaves to Racism is a historical eyewitness account of the effect of racism in two countries, one black, one white, showing how American racism traps blacks even in Africa. The tales he tells illustrate the twists of irony and misplaced pride on all sides. Prof. Dennis chronicles the compulsive and repetitious nature of racism and its destructive effects on peoples and societies. During the 1990s, Liberia descended into civil war and anarchy. African-Liberian rebel groups roamed the countryside randomly killing as they vied for power. Doe was killed by a segment of these rebel groups and warlord Charles Taylor eventually became president in 1997. In 2003, Taylor was deposed by rebel groups and is now on trial at The Hague for war crimes. Despite Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf's democratic election in 2005, Liberia remains in ruins as a classic failed state in Africa. The obvious question is: Why did the Negro experiment planted in Africa in 1822 fail so miserably? Liberia was doomed from the start. The sins of the master were inevitably passed on to the freed slaves who returned to Africa to ''make a fresh start.'' To assert status the Americo-Liberians blindly followed the worst habits of the whites, imposing themselves as a superior class on the ''African Liberians'' who had never left. With only a superficial knowledge of Western culture, they imagined the white way without truly understanding it, and made Liberia a caricature of Southern society. Prof. Dennis compares the prejudice and discrimination between groups in Liberia with the patterns he has encountered between and among blacks and whites in the United States, from blatant bigotry to the almost subliminal boundaries that still exist even among liberal communities that ''want more blacks.''

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