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    Throughout the autobiography of Malcolm X‚ as told by Alex Haley‚ it is evident that there are multiple key events that make Malcolm who he was towards the end of his life: an advocate for African American rights. His childhood‚ his drug addiction‚ his finding of Elijah Muhammad are all key events that led him to become an advocate for racial injustice. Malcolm X lost his father at a young age. His father‚ the Reverend Earl Little‚ was murdered by KKK members. When Malcolm’s mother went to claim

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    History 100 Peter Hohn February 8‚ 2013 Malcolm X and the Limits of the Rhetoric of Revolutionary Dissent Celeste Michelle Condit & John Louis Lucaites argues that‚ Malcolm X the most thorough and relentless revolutionary dissident of the 1960s‚ who loudly implored his Black brothers and sisters to use “all means necessary” to bring about social and political justice and equality for Black America. It was impossible to know whether or not Malcolm X’s evolutionary vision would ever have produced

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    with MLK‚ Malcolm X wanted justice for African Americans. The morality African Americans believe they deserve‚ due to their contemporary inconvenience. However‚ the approach Malcolm X conveys was the opposite of MLK’s tactics for achieving justice. The lifelong brutality was finally taking a toll on the people. The way African Americans were getting treated regarding their skin color was soon the outcome of the approach Malcolm had in mind for justice. Violence against African Americans had occurred

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    Back in the 1960s‚ Malcolm X was an influential public speaker. He protested for equal rights of African Americans. At that time‚ in the United States‚ African Americans did not have the same rights as white people. He had a rough upbringing; he was born into a large family and had eight siblings. By the time he was twelve years old‚ his mother had been sent to a mental hospital‚ and his father had been killed after being hit by a car. He then spent the rest of his childhood in foster homes. In 1946

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    Multicultural Issues Identity Formation: Malcolm X Everyday African-Americans go through identity formation. Identity formation is the development of the distinct personality of an individual regarded as a persisting entity. While watching the movie‚ Malcolm X‚ starring Denzel Washington as Malcolm‚ he shows many stages of identity formation. His whole life‚ he went by taking chances. The choices and decisions he made either ended good of ended bad. By the end of the movie‚ it ended in

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    shared‚ called Cultural Universals. The four types of Cultural Universals are communication‚ values‚ physical objects‚ and ideals and religion. The novels Malcolm X: By Any Means Possible‚ Roll of Thunder‚ Hear My Cry‚ and A Tugging String illustrated their main topics and themes through shared cultural universals. In the book Malcolm X: By Any Means Necessary‚ written by Walter Dean Myers‚ the cultural universal of values was used frequently. Evidence/Source

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    How Did Malcolm X Change

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    Malcolm X went through a huge change in his life that ultimately led to his death. When he was young he faced racial discrimination by getting visited by the Ku Klux Klan and getting his house. Thinking this Malcolm X grew up and you can see how Malcolm X was trying to be more white by making his hair like theirs. Malcolm X wore a suit and was dating 2 women‚ a white girl named Sophia and a black Christian girl. He treated Sophia like she was his property and cheated on his black girlfriend‚ who

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    11/1/10 Compare and Contrast Professor Watson Compare and Contrast: Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr. The 1960’s was a tumultuous time in the United States of America. The civil rights movement polarized the citizens of the country. The civil rights movement was responsible for bringing equality to all men and there were two very different but successful men that led this movement. Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr. were both civil rights leaders but they had very different views on

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    3 Philosophies of Martin Luther King and Malcolm X The late 1950s to mid-1960s was a time when violence and injustice had reached its peak. Many people were treated unfairly and the mood of the country overall was very gloomy and unhappy. Martin Luther King and Malcolm X were both very well-known activists who fought to make things equal and right. Both activists shared similar beliefs against the racial injustice brought against African Americans by whites although their methods of achieving

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    Malcolm X was born Malcolm Little on May 19‚ 1925‚ in Omaha‚ Nebraska. His father‚ a Baptist minister‚ Garvey supported a "back-to-Africa" movement for African Americans. During Malcolm’s early years‚ his family moved several times because of racism. They moved from Omaha‚ Nebraska‚ after being threatened by the Ku Klux Klan. While living in an all-white neighborhood in Michigan their house was burned. When Malcolm was six years old‚ his father was mysteriously murdered. The black community was convinced

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