Mothers, fathers, daughters, sons, aunts, uncles, grandparents, pimps, prostitutes, straight people, gay people, lesbian people, Europeans, Asians, Indians, and Africans all have once thing in common: they are products of sexuality. Sexuality is the most common activity in the world, yet is considered taboo and “out of the norm” in modern society. Throughout history, people have been harassed, discriminated against, and shunned for their “sexuality”. One person who knows this all too well is activist and author, Angela Davis. From her experiences, Davis has analyzed the weakness of global society in order to propose intellectual theories on how to change the perspective of sexuality. This research paper will explore the discussions of …show more content…
Angela Davis began her college career at Brandeis University to study French which granted her the opportunity to study abroad in France. In 1963, while Davis was in France four black girls were killed in a church bombing known as the 16th Street Church Bombing. This tragedy sparked Davis’ Passion for philosophy because she was personally affected by the bombing since she knew two of the killed victims.
In 1969, Davis came back the America and joined several radical civil rights organizations. She was a member of the Communist Party, USA and a member of the Black Panther Party along with being an assistance professor at the University of California- Los Angeles (UCLA). Governor at the time, Ronald Reagan, tried to terminate her position as UCLA professor because of her Communist affiliation, but that was overturned. Yet, devastation struck only a few months later.
August 7, 1970, a young black male, Johnathan Jackson held Superior Court Judge, Harold Haley, a prosecutor, and three jury members hostage. He eventually shot and killed Judge Haley and the prosecutor. Coincidentally, the pistol Johnathan Jackson used to kill the judge and prosecutor were bought by Angela Davis a day before the shooting; therefore, Angela Davis was put on a 13 week trial for murder, kidnapping and conspiracy charges. In the end, Davis was found not guilty, yet still has to live with the
Gender, race, age, and ability have been used to shape the history and our understanding of human sexuality, as well as how certain groups, specifically marginalized groups, were seen as degenerate or delinquent people. When examining why and how specific groups of people were though of as being sexual delinquents, it is important to use an intersectional lens, and consider how these different categories and identities of gender, race, age, and ability work together to form experiences and opinions. By marginalizing, controlling, and regulating the sexualities and bodies of those who were women, people of colour, adolescents, or differentially abled, the social norm of a white, heterosexual, patriarchy has been enforced through history.
“Some are born great, some achieve greatness, and some have greatness thrust upon them.” (William Shakespeare) No one can truly say who is born great and who is not. In Angela Davis's case she achieved greatness and had greatness thrust upon her. She was and still is an African -American female leader in a time where she did not meet the status quo. She was fighting for the civil rights of her people. She educated the masses on what it is like to be black in America. She spread the truth and wasn't afraid of the consequences. She is a force. To be all those things she must possess certain sets of qualities. After researching Ms. Davis, she has presented a certain set of qualities that make her such a dynamic and impactful leader.
Nagel’s text discussing the driving factors behind international perceptions of sexuality offers an insight into how sexuality is viewed and understood globally. She discusses how culture, country of origin, ancestry, language, religion, and ethnicity/race play a crucial role in the perception of individual sexuality and its reception by its audience. Joanne Nagel writes about the ways in which heterosexuality is still very much the norm in ethno sexual spaces and the impact that heteronormativity has on members of different races, ethnic groups and nations. Nagel then goes on to highlight how racial and ethnic boundaries play a role in how the sexuality of peoples belonging to specific ethnic, racial and cultural groups are received by members of other ethnic, cultural and racial groups. She explains how these boundaries help create a narrative of ‘us vs them’, ‘pure vs impure’ ‘wrong vs right’, where differences such as
6-Daisy Bates-This civil rights activist,writer and publisher was born on November 11,1914 in Huttig,Arkansas. Bates did not have a great childhood Her mother was sexually assaulted and killed by three white men and her father left. As a result,she was raised by family friends. In her teen years,she meet Lucious Christopher “L.C.” Bates. He was an insuarance agent amd expirenced journalist. They married in the early 40`s and moved to Little rock,Arkansas. The couple operated the Arkansas State Press,a weekly African-American newspaper. The paper championed civil rights and Bates decided to join the civil rights movement. In 1952,she became president of the Arkansas NAACP. Of course,being the head of the Arkansas NAACP branch,she played a cruicial role in the fight against segregation. In 1954,the United
Have you ever wondered how sexuality is viewed in the eyes of a different culture? Since America is a melting pot specifically with the Latino culture we have and is a very diverse country, it still carries culture identity. When you have a set cultural ideology for example the Latino Culture ideology, it sets the rules and norms for gender and sexual identity. In this essay we will be talking about how religious aspects of the Latino/a culture are affecting how people view sexual orientation. How religion in the Latino culture creates a discrimination against homosexuality and non-gender norms. This topic was chosen because I believe it is interesting how some cultures are used to believing that certain rituals and big events have to be within a man and a woman and cannot be both. I have personally witnessed how sexuality does affect the Latino culture; and has been involved in the rituals that make it so heteronormative. Through evidence of religious cultures, gendered identities and family structures we will see how religion in the Latino culture shapes and forms sexuality. I will be examining how Catholicism shapes cultural norms for sexual orientation and gender identity, how heteronormativity is reinforced as the main stream within the religious Latino culture and how it is insensitive towards homosexuality. How having family and social circles that are used to a culture around are perpetuating gender identity against sexuality.
Angela Davis is recognized as an advocate for feminism, prison reform, and communism. She is best known as a radical African American educator and activist for civil rights. She established her own group called the Critical Resistance, an organization working to abolish the prison-industrial complex.While a high school student, she performed well, earning her a scholarship to Brandeis University where she graduated Magna Cum Laude in French literature. After that, she continued to earn numerous degrees which include studies at University of Paris, 1963–64; graduate study at University of Frankfurt (Germany), 1965–67; University of California, San Diego, M.A., 1968, doctoral study, 1968–69. (Horsley, 2017)
Angela Davis, a well-known activist, educator and author, was born on January 26th, 1944 in Birmingham Alabama. Her parents, Frank Davis was a station owner, and her mother Sallye Davis was a school teacher (BlackPast.org, 2017). Davis enrolled in Brandeis University in 1961 and in 1965 she received her bachelor’s degree. After her graduation from Brandeis she continued her education and received her Master’s degree in 1968 from UCLA. Just one year later, in 1969 she was hired by UCLA as an assistant professor of philosophy. It is at this time that her interest in prison reform, something that she would spend her life working on, began to take hold (BlackPast.org,
While traveling to Nashville she decided to treat herself to a first class train ticket. Once she got onto the train, the conductor along with security tried forcing her out of her seat and into the African-American car of the train. She attempted to refuse but eventually had to move. This was the start to her Civil Rights Movement drive. Another situation that added to her passion of the Civil Rights movement was the condition of the school that she had previously worked in. It was an all black school and the condition was absolutely terrible. Due to her thoughts on this being shared in the paper, she was fired from her job at that school.
The Daily Bruin, a UCLA campus newspaper printed an article written by an uncover FBI agent declaring she was a Communist. When questioned by school officials she recognized being a Communist which led the UC Regents Board firing her based on a 30 year old university regulation that prohibited Communist on the faculty. As published in the Daily Bruin in 1996, they fear that Davis’s political beliefs would somehow brainwash UCLA students to become communists themselves. When she was fired a lawsuit was filed by a UCLA law professor against the regents on Davis’ behalf which ruled she has the right to teach at UCLA. She ended up leaving when her contract expired in
Since birth your gender has been predetermined, however, what if you felt you were not that gender and decided you were the opposite gender? Let us pretend you got sent to prison, which sections would you prefer to be sent to? Would it be by how you identify or your given sex when you were born? In the book, Freedom is a Constant Struggle, written by Angela Davis it is about the mass movements that have changed our society as a whole, to continue pushing ourselves to improve, and not stick with the norms. Davis mentions how we should not get comfortable with the thought of a binary structure, it is not just males or females anymore. Something that can get confused is the difference between gender and sex, both are different. Sex is determined
Born January 16, 1944 in Birmingham, Alabama, Davis grew up in the segregated south and personally experienced racial prejudice and violence. As a teen, Davis organized interracial study groups, which police often disbanded and she also personally knew several of the young African-American girls killed in the 1963 Birmingham church bombing. While working as an associate professor of philosophy at the University of California, Davis got involved in the Communist Party and the Black Panther Party. In the 1970s, Davis was charged with murder for her alleged involvement in helping with George Lester Jackson’s attempted escape, but
Angela Davis was born January 26,1994 in Birmingham, Alabama. Her father’s name is Frank Davis, her mother is Sallye Davis, her sister is Fania Davis Jordan, and her brothers are Reginald Davis and Ben Davis. She is the oldest out of the three of her siblings. Angela’s parents were both teachers in Birmingham school systems. When Davis was only four, her and her family moved to Birmingham in a nicely-sized wooden house. Throughout Davis’s childhood, all of Birmingham was segregated. White neighbors tried to divide the neighborhood and also tried running black families out the neighborhood by threats bombing their homes.
She was a liberal thinker living amongst conservative minds. Many of the friends that she had were considered “outcasts” by Atlanta social standards. One of her friends was expelled from the Peace Corps because he dared to date a black woman in Africa. She went to high school with the son of a governor who took out an ax to repel demonstrators and shut down his restaurant rather than “serve blacks” (Kellogg 2016). Dating the captain of the Atlanta Hawks basketball team, the couple would remain in “safe” neighborhoods out of fear of the violence he would face for being out with a white girl (Kellogg 2016). Working in the radio industry, she had a lot of black friends, and it was recalling those moments in the present how unusual it was to go to the clubs and see artists such as Ray Charles and the Fifth Dimension performing in person. Growing up listening to black artists, there was a lot of hostility regarding the racist attitude of the rest of Atlanta versus her own. This is evident in an essay written by her in 1976 titled “Today I’m Going to Be Green” served as the advertising campaign for ARCO oil that envisioned her perspective of the world in the year of 2076. In her writing, she imagined the world “where color didn’t matter” and is optimistic about the direction concerning the progress going forward (Kellogg 2016). Her support for equal rights was a part of her principles, witnessing the funeral parade of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. from a tall
Sexuality within human culture can have a wide variety of definitions and as human beings on a cultural level differences in “Appropriate” and “Inappropriate” sexuality can differ. The Hindu and Muslim traditions and ethics will be examined in this essay. Although there are very similar views between Hinduism and Islam the reasoning behind these, views differ due to the fact that basic key concepts of these faiths differ so tremendously. Although at a superficial glance the ethical viewpoints of Gender roles, Sexuality as a whole, Homosexuality ,and Sexuality as a whole seem almost consistent with one another. Although they differ in more ways than they are similar.
Homosexuality has existed going back to 600 BC or maybe even longer. It was never accepted in cultures all over the world until 2000. In recent years the United States has legally accepted same sex marriage by a Supreme Court ruling. The reasoning behind why it was never accepted were various different reasons. Some of those reasons are tied into religion, taboo due to the norms, or from an individual’s personality. From these major reasons, it has caused homosexuals to be discriminated from verbal assault, physical assault, and to the point of even death. The victims from this issue is not only the homosexual, but also their family and friends. For some homosexuals their family and friends might be accepting of their sexuality or reject it. Fearful of their own lives, their friends and families are put in a tough position. For the world it is the same case as well. With it gradually becoming more accepted in early 2000’s all over the world, will it fully be accepted all over the world. In this research, we will see how homosexuality has been living in a society that views it as an issue, and people’s personality towards it. The ultimate goal will be if there has or is any compromise from the recent to present not just in the United States, but globally as well.