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Riot in My Senses

Riot in My Senses
Author: Rima Jbara
Publisher:
Total Pages: 138
Release: 2010-04-24
Genre:
ISBN: 9781450531863

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'Riot In My Senses' explores the life of a woman, in four doors. First door leads to her soul which elucidates why it withdraws from peacefulness. Second door leads to her heart which clarifies why her heart is temporarily occupied. Third door leads to her mind which explains why it is puzzled. Fourth door leads to her senses which illustrate in detail the most vital fragment of her journey where occurrences of chaos and figments of her imagination condemn her. Her personal life, and public appearances are all respectable, but no one suspects that she is mentally unstable. Alarmed and not knowing how to deal with her state, she unconsciously yields and penetrates a world of intricacy interweaved with illusion, knowing and unknowing her perfect imperfections.


Riot in My Senses

Riot in My Senses
Author: Rima Jbara
Publisher:
Total Pages: 174
Release: 2017-05-24
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9781524681692

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You have selected this book, and by doing so, you have knocked on my door. This insinuates your desire to know more about me. So let us not waste time and commence. In my house are four doors that lead you to four rooms. The first door leads you to my soul. The second door leads you to my heart. The third door leads you to my mind. The fourth door leads you to my senses. The first room elucidates why my soul withdraws from peacefulness. The second room clarifies why my heart is temporarily occupied. The third room explains why my mind is puzzled. The fourth room illustrates why there is a riot in my senses and illustrates in detail the most vital fragment of my journey where occurrences of chaos and figments of my imagination condemn me. Now, which room would you like to enter? I suggest you enter all the rooms--one by one--to embrace the experience. Make sure you enter the rooms in the same order that I have introduced them to you. Why? Well, if you don't, you will be in a perplexing situation and nothing will seem significant. Finally, I want you to know that the journey does not finish with the ending of this book.


Why Didn't We Riot?

Why Didn't We Riot?
Author: Issac J. Bailey
Publisher: Other Press, LLC
Total Pages: 193
Release: 2020-10-06
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1635420288

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In these impassioned, powerful essays, an award-winning journalist deals forthrightly with what it means to be Black in an America that still supports Trump. South Carolina–based journalist Issac J. Bailey reflects on a wide range of complex, divisive topics—from police brutality and Confederate symbols to respectability politics and white discomfort—which have taken on a fresh urgency with the protest movement sparked by George Floyd’s killing. Bailey has been honing his views on these issues for the past quarter of a century in his professional and private life, which included an eighteen-year stint as a member of a mostly white Evangelical Christian church. Why Didn’t We Riot? speaks to and for the millions of Black and Brown people throughout the United States who were effectively pushed back to the back of the bus in the Trump era by a media that prioritized the concerns and feelings of the white working class and an administration that made white supremacists giddy, and explains why the country’s fate in 2020 and beyond is largely in their hands. It will be an invaluable resource for the everyday reader, as well as political analysts, college professors and students, and political consultants and campaigns vying for high office.


The Way of Me

The Way of Me
Author: Rima Jbara
Publisher: AuthorHouse
Total Pages: 68
Release: 2024-05-19
Genre: Fiction
ISBN:

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Intimate and puzzling short stories of women from different walks of life. A stairway surprise into their chambers to find a string of playful, poignant, and passionate narratives. Voices of various personas reveal accurate dramatic monologues and dialogues of a sensitive nature addressed to no one and everyone. “Though we are various women, our voices are the voice of one. We are nobody. Our stores might be of no significant importance and might disappear into history. What is your story? Who are you?”


The Deadly Ethnic Riot

The Deadly Ethnic Riot
Author: Donald L. Horowitz
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Total Pages: 608
Release: 2023-11-10
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0520342054

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Donald L. Horowitz's comprehensive consideration of the structure and dynamics of ethnic violence is the first full-scale, comparative study of what the author terms the deadly ethnic riot—an intense, sudden, lethal attack by civilian members of one ethnic group on civilian members of another ethnic group. Serious, frequent, and destabilizing, these events result in large numbers of casualties. Horowitz examines approximately 150 such riots in about fifty countries, mainly in Asia, Africa, and the former Soviet Union, as well as fifty control cases. With its deep and thorough scholarship, incisive analysis, and profound insights, The Deadly Ethnic Riot will become the definitive work on its subject. Furious and sadistic, the riot is nevertheless directed against a precisely specified class of targets and conducted with considerable circumspection. Horowitz scrutinizes target choices, participants and organization, the timing and supporting conditions for the violence, the nature of the events that precede the riot, the prevalence of atrocities during the violence, the location and diffusion of riots, and the aims and effects of riot behavior. He finds that the deadly ethnic riot is a highly patterned but emotional event that tends to occur during times of political uncertainty. He also discusses the crucial role of rumor in triggering riots, the surprisingly limited role of deliberate organization, and the striking lack of remorse exhibited by participants. Horowitz writes clearly and eloquently without compromising the complexity of his subject. With impressive analytical skill, he takes up the important challenge of explaining phenomena that are at once passionate and calculative.


Thanks for This Riot

Thanks for This Riot
Author: Janelle Bassett
Publisher: U of Nebraska Press
Total Pages: 185
Release: 2024-09
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 149624074X

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Winner of the Raz/Shumaker Prairie Schooner Book Prize in Fiction Thanks for This Riot explores the limits of kindness, the weight of being needed, and the fear of being misunderstood. A group counselor is taunted by a truth-divining piano bench, a voice actor shouts her abortion at the state capitol, a tired caregiver tangles with a pair of stand-up comics, a small-town newspaper office shelters an otherworldly tattletale, a backwoods acupuncturist leans on her least-exciting offspring, a girl in a strapless bra takes a vengeful go-kart ride, and a woman gets surgery to lower her expectations (she thinks it went “okay”). Grouped by types of riot—external riots, internal riots, and laugh riots—Thanks for This Riot is a poignant and mordantly funny collection with a distinctly feminist viewpoint.


The Law Times Reports

The Law Times Reports
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 892
Release: 1924
Genre: Law reports, digests, etc
ISBN:

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The Princess Chrysalline

The Princess Chrysalline
Author: S. E. Sells
Publisher: BoD – Books on Demand
Total Pages: 42
Release: 2024-04-07
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 3385402891

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Reprint of the original, first published in 1882.


Common Sense

Common Sense
Author: Michael Gose
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 267
Release: 2014-06-11
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1475807600

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“Finally a book about teaching that tells it like it is,” NEA Today said about Michael Gose’s first edition, What It Means to Be a Teacher. The second edition continues the stories that capture the meaning of teaching and now looks back with commentary on how those tales also work as parables. In the spirit of Thomas Paine, this second edition uses “Common Sense” to tell what is really going on with students, teachers, and schools. (Hint: the reality is actually a lot more optimistic than commonly portrayed in the media.)


"Brown" in Baltimore

Author: Howell S. Baum
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Total Pages: 295
Release: 2011-01-15
Genre: Education
ISBN: 0801457106

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In the first book to present the history of Baltimore school desegregation, Howell S. Baum shows how good intentions got stuck on what Gunnar Myrdal called the "American Dilemma." Immediately after the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision, the city's liberal school board voted to desegregate and adopted a free choice policy that made integration voluntary. Baltimore's school desegregation proceeded peacefully, without the resistance or violence that occurred elsewhere. However, few whites chose to attend school with blacks, and after a few years of modest desegregation, schools resegregated and became increasingly segregated. The school board never changed its policy. Black leaders had urged the board to adopt free choice and, despite the limited desegregation, continued to support the policy and never sued the board to do anything else. Baum finds that American liberalism is the key to explaining how this happened. Myrdal observed that many whites believed in equality in the abstract but considered blacks inferior and treated them unequally. School officials were classical liberals who saw the world in terms of individuals, not races. They adopted a desegregation policy that explicitly ignored students' race and asserted that all students were equal in freedom to choose schools, while their policy let whites who disliked blacks avoid integration. School officials' liberal thinking hindered them from understanding or talking about the city's history of racial segregation, continuing barriers to desegregation, and realistic change strategies. From the classroom to city hall, Baum examines how Baltimore's distinct identity as a border city between North and South shaped local conversations about the national conflict over race and equality. The city's history of wrestling with the legacy of Brown reveals Americans' preferred way of dealing with racial issues: not talking about race. This avoidance, Baum concludes, allows segregation to continue.