While reading about Malcolm X’s story was that it was most definitely inspiring that he was self-motivated about getting an education, he was more motivated than most people about getting an education, as for a literary sponsor he triumphantly educated himself. He then became a remarkably literate man throughout his life. One of Malcolm X’s biggest influential sponsors of literacy was when he was in jail. If he Malcolm had not gone to jail he would probably still have been living on the streets and would have most likely not have been assassinated in 1965. Being in jail was probably the most important that gave Malcolm the motivation to attain the ability to learn. When he was in jail it gave him a place to study with nothing distracting him…
Richard Wright and Malcolm x were two gigantic inspirational speakers. They were two historians who pave the way for what America has become. Although it’s an ongoing journey their struggles and determinations, have given many other who followed in their footsteps. The courage they need to open the doors to discriminations instilled in it. Love, peace and acceptance and to formed unity amongst all people.…
Both Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X were important figures in Civil Rights and race equality, and both were active in the same time era. However, despite advocating for the same idea (rights for African Americans), Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X had very different ideas on how exactly they would try to establish their ideas and expand their base of followers/supporters. This paper is to define their differences and similarities, while providing some background into both Malcolm X’s and Martin Luther King Jr’s and discussing how the differences in their upbringing may have influenced their ideals in their spokesperson career.…
Think of a person who has positively influenced your life or for whom you have great admiration. Write down the characteristics that person has/had that you would like to develop. My grand father, because he was always the nicest, and most wise person I have met. He always knew which right decisions to make, when they were to be made. He told me to always think of the consequences to my decisions and that if they were good to go ahead and make the right decision.…
Many elements of form used in this piece of literature is Imagery of sight. This is so the reader could get a vivid mental image that deepens the readers understanding of that exact scene. When Malcolm X was brutally assassinated the author used imagery to help the reader fully realize the perspective of what is happening. The author says “Then the other hand flew up. The middle finger of the left hand was bullet-shattered, and blood gushed from his goatee. He clutched his chest. His big body suddenly fell back stiffly, knocking over two chairs; his head struck the stage floor with a thud” (443). This enables the reader with a vivid picture of what Malcolm had looked like at the time.…
Malcolm was a black muslim as well as a black nationalist under the guidance of Elijah Muhammad, founder of the Nation of Islam which combined elements from both Black Nationalism and Islam, together they sought out to once again resegregate white and black people and create a separate nation from Georgia, Alabama and Mississippi, this nation would then solely inhabit black people. Malcolm X used the current civil rights movement to fuel his campaign and recruit followers, he spoke at several accredited universities Harvard and Oxford being among them. Malcolm was driven by two things will power and belief, his belief in not only the Islamic teachings but also his belief in the superiority of black people, he used his will power to gather…
Most people learn to read and write with the help of a teacher and workbooks in a classroom. Frederick Douglass and Malcolm X had none of these advantages. Despite great obstacles both Frederick Douglass and Malcolm X became literate. Although their paths to literacy have some notable differences, the similarities are most striking. They both learned to read and write largely on their own, and in the process, became independent thinkers with a profound influence on others.…
Malcolm X is one of the most controversial figures in US history. His dominant image is that of a ‘black supremacist’; an image embedded into the mass mind to such an extent it has become an ‘historical fact’. The picture painted has associated Malcolm with violence, racism and hate, so future generations will dismiss him as just a racist demagogue – a one-dimensional, fanatical enemy of America. This raises the issue of ‘facts in history’, and how such accusations became ‘facts’. However, in this essay, I will show that such images belie Malcolm X’s extraordinary dynamism and non-fixedness, and his immense metamorphoses as a man, leader, and thinker. Having divided his life into three stages – since he did live his life in three distinct stages, with three different personalities and goals – I conclude that while the dominant image is superficially plausible, it is in fact an image severely distorted due to the threat that Malcolm posed to racial domination and inequality, and by extension his threat to both US domestic security and US foreign policy, even after his death. Malcolm X himself predicted exactly this in his autobiography – that after he dies “the white man, in his press, is going to identify [him] with ‘hate’. He will make use of [him] dead, as he has made use of [him] alive, as a convenient symbol of ‘hatred’” (MALCOLM X, 1964, 381).…
Alex Haley, the writer of Malcolm X's biography knew that to succeed in America, a person must be educated. Without education it is almost impossible to achieve the self made man ideology (SMMI). In Malcolm's case he achieved the SMMI without the help of a formal education. Malcolm X's use of self education, coupled with religious inspiration and guidance, led him to become one of the greatest civil rights activists in America.…
Nonetheless, he ends up at a similar conclusion: Knowledge will give him the ability to assume control of a situation and to influence others with his words—not only spoken, but written as well. It is a fellow prison inmate, Bimbi, who first inspires Malcolm X. “It had really begun . . . when Bimbi first made me feel envy of his stock of knowledge,” Malcolm X expresses. “Bimbi had always taken charge of any conversations he was in . . .” (1). Through Bimbi, by failing to imitate what the inmate did, Malcolm X finds his motivation to become literate. “As I see it today, the ability to read awoke inside me some long dormant craving to be mentally…
Malcolm X was an activist that continued on the legacy that his father showed him and left behind. Just like his father he wanted peace and he wanted to get it even if it meant that things got violent. He wanted the equality for black people. He didn’t think that how blacks were getting treated were fair. He was going to fight for what he thought was right by any means necessary.…
During the Civil Rights Movement, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X fought for people whose rights were discriminated against.…
Malcolm and Douglass commonly communicate how essential the process of learning to read and write were to their personal development and social awareness. Their interpretation of how words have the ability to move, transform even liberate people is astounding. Malcolm states “I never had been so truly free in my life”, and “reading had forever changed the course of my life”. (Malcolm X) The importance of both of these works in both African American and American literature signify how reading and writing can become a catalyst for social and personal liberation as knowledge is learned, shared and acted…
Great public speakers are remembered in history by their influential and charismatic attitude towards their peers and audiences in a public setting. One man who had the ability to create such a profound motivational confidence among his followers is Malcolm X. Malcolm X an African-American leader and figurehead of the Nation of Islam became a Civil Rights Activists during the 1950 & 60’s to battle the issues about race and black independence. Born on May 19, 1925 in Omaha, Nebraska, Malcolm X was one of eight children in his family. Malcolm’s father Earl Little, an active preacher and member of the Universal Negro Improvement Association attracted a lot of harassment to the family due to his involvement in acaivitism. Eventually, Malcolm’s…
* I have always had a love for reading since I was little. The older Iv gotten the more it has grown as well. I believe reading defines me as a person because I like to believe that I will get to live and experience many different life stories just like the…