emberton_only_murder_makes_men
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The service of black men in the Union army was viewed differently by W.E.B. Du Bois and Frederick Douglass. Du Bois struggled with the relationship that might happen between the manhood and freedom of black men and violence. Douglass, however, felt that the involvement of black men in the military was necessary for their own liberty. (Sarah M) | The service of black men in the Union army was viewed differently by W.E.B. Du Bois and Frederick Douglass. Du Bois struggled with the relationship that might happen between the manhood and freedom of black men and violence. Douglass, however, felt that the involvement of black men in the military was necessary for their own liberty. (Sarah M) | ||
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+ | W.E.B. Du Bois made the argument that black men were only able to become “real men” in the eyes of white Americans after they killed or died for the cause (in war and rebellion), which is an interesting assertion about the relationship between violence and manhood in the U.S. (Sophia) | ||
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+ | During reconstruction, | ||
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+ | In his autobiography, |
emberton_only_murder_makes_men.1741826102.txt.gz · Last modified: 2025/03/13 00:35 by smoore9 · Currently locked by: 3.145.15.174