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. Malcolm X was born on May 12‚ 1925. His parents are Earl little and Louise little. He had eight siblings and the middle
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Steven Marmolejo Reflection Essay The autobiography of Malcolm X was a good book to read and showed me things that I didn’t know about Malcolm X before. I liked this book a lot because Malcolm’s childhood and early adulthood were really shocking for me‚ as I have never heard about it before. I knew that Malcolm X was an important figure in fight against racism‚ but the way his life started from being a poor child to becoming a drug dealer as he got older surprised me. I didn’t know
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Malcom X Javier Figueroa Lynn University Judaism There are several public figures in this world who are considered to be famous and some who existed a long time ago whose names are still alive and current. Some of them have different ideologies. One famous person who was known for his ideologies was Malcom X‚ an individual who was protesting against the racism of white people against the black population‚ and the unfair inequality that existed as a result of it. Unlike Martin Luther
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Malcolm X’s Prison Education Malcolm X was an African American Muslim minister who‚ as a teen‚ spent most of his time hustling people and getting into trouble. This soon landed him in prison. During his prison sentence he became self-educated‚ which led him to be an articulate speaker‚ to discover the true history of African American slaves‚ and to become a strong advocator of human rights. Malcolm X’s “A Homemade Education”‚ starts off in a soft and calm tone. X uses a persuasive style narrative
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Analytical Essay on The Autobiography of Malcolm X‚ as told by Alex Haley African-American History‚ HIST 2450 In 1971‚ a psychologist by the name of William E. Cross‚ Jr‚ released his Black identity model. It’s a model with the purpose of theoretically explains the process in which African Americans develop their cultural identity. There are five stages in which are the pre-encounter‚ encounter‚ immersion‚ internalization‚ and finally the internalization-commitment
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Sam Smith Professor Schley English 112 3 February 2014 Malcolm X “Learning to Read” Malcolm X was born Malcolm Little on May 19‚ 1925. He was one of the most articulate and powerful leaders of black America during the 60s. Malcolm X dropped out of school after 8th grade. Shortly after this he got involved in criminal activity and eventually ended up in prison. Prison motivated him to further his reading and become literate. He wrote letters to Mr. Elijah Muhammad of the Islam Nation‚ about
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A Comparative and Contrasting Essay on 20th Century Black Political Leaders: Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. And Malcolm X This essay will discuss Martin Luther King’s integration and assimilation in addition to Malcolm X’s separatism and Black Nationalism. Through Manning Marable’s assessment I will demonstrate that the ideological belief of Martin Luther King’s integration is a favourable representative of 20th century Black politics. The Civil Rights Movement symbolized the challenge and opposition
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society. Malcolm X’s passion as a civil right’s activist vocalized the African Americans’ struggles and provided them with a newfound identity. According to psychoanalyst Erik Erikson‚ one’s identity‚ an instinctive sentiment of judgments and beliefs‚ is only subject to change in severely traumatic instances. The Autobiography of Malcolm X‚ along with a multitude of interviews and speeches‚ reveal 4 distinct different identities of Malcolm’s throughout his life: Malcolm Little‚ Big Red‚ Malcolm X‚ and
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rights movement‚ two seminal figures emerge: that of the peaceful and nonviolent Martin Luther King‚ Jr.‚ and the revolutionary and radical Malcolm X. From these two contrasting images‚ America did not know how exactly to classify the movement. On one hand‚ Malcolm X preached independence and a "by any means necessary" approach to achieving equality in America. And on the other‚ King preached a nonviolent‚ disobedient philosophy similar to that of Gandhi in the achievement of Indian independence earlier
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The Autobiography of Malcom X The Autobiography of Malcolm X (1965) by Alex Haley‚ deliberates influencing writing with the uses of simple rhetoric devices. This is developed through the many stages of Malcolm’s life: on the streets of Harlem‚ his wonders in the Nation of Islam and Mecca‚ as he evaluates his views on racialism‚ politics‚ and spiritually. In Malcolm’s childhood‚ his memories from Ku Klux Klan come back‚ since the destruction his family were backgrounds of hardship. the biographies
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