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Examples
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But "states 'rights is also an argument with a history tied to racial segregation during the civil rights' era," Harris-Lacewell said.
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The personal is political, writes Melissa Harris-Lacewell, at The Nation (linked here at AlterNet).
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Prof. Melissa Harris-Lacewell, who taught a course "Race, Disaster, and American Politics" at Princeton University that included a class trip to New Orleans soon after Hurricane Katrina landed, described how learning is a dynamic exchange: "... students always teach you at least as much, and maybe more, than you teach them."
Dr. Norma Bowe: Lessons Learned: Sometimes "No Day at the Beach" Dr. Norma Bowe 2010
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Harris-Lacewell points out that Obama made his African father a part of his campaign narrative.
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Prof. Melissa Harris-Lacewell, who taught a course "Race, Disaster, and American Politics" at Princeton University that included a class trip to New Orleans soon after Hurricane Katrina landed, described how learning is a dynamic exchange: "... students always teach you at least as much, and maybe more, than you teach them."
Dr. Norma Bowe: Lessons Learned: Sometimes "No Day at the Beach" Dr. Norma Bowe 2010
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A neat perspective on the interplay of race and gender is found in her quote from Melissa Harris-Lacewell, a black Princeton University professor: Every time [reporters] would ask me 'Are you going to support him because he's black or her because she's a woman?'
Geri Spieler: Big Girls Don't Cry by Rebecca Traister Geri Spieler 2010
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Prof. Melissa Harris-Lacewell, who taught a course "Race, Disaster, and American Politics" at Princeton University that included a class trip to New Orleans soon after Hurricane Katrina landed, described how learning is a dynamic exchange: "... students always teach you at least as much, and maybe more, than you teach them."
Dr. Norma Bowe: Lessons Learned: Sometimes "No Day at the Beach" Dr. Norma Bowe 2010
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Prof. Melissa Harris-Lacewell, who taught a course "Race, Disaster, and American Politics" at Princeton University that included a class trip to New Orleans soon after Hurricane Katrina landed, described how learning is a dynamic exchange: "... students always teach you at least as much, and maybe more, than you teach them."
Dr. Norma Bowe: Lessons Learned: Sometimes "No Day at the Beach" Dr. Norma Bowe 2010
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A neat perspective on the interplay of race and gender is found in her quote from Melissa Harris-Lacewell, a black Princeton University professor: Every time [reporters] would ask me 'Are you going to support him because he's black or her because she's a woman?'
Geri Spieler: Big Girls Don't Cry by Rebecca Traister Geri Spieler 2010
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As a politics and African-American studies professor at Princeton University, Melissa Harris-Lacewell typically advocates discussion about the racist overtones in images or language bandied in public discourse.
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