Ebonics Versus English
I lived in Oakland during my teenage and college years. Naturally, some years later (after moving to another city) I heard about the proposal for considering "Ebonics" as a new dialect on the news. I had a negative gut reaction (to put it mildly) aided by disbelief, anger, and growing determination to be part of any opposition that might form. Accept the argument that English is not able to accommodate the needs or express the thoughts of all Americans? As Patrick Henry once said: "Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? Forbid it, Almighty God! I know not what course others may take; but as for me, give me liberty or give me death!"
"Rosenberg reporting for duty, sir, for the Defense of The English Language!"
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In Robert Louis Stevenson’s classic story, Hyde and Jekyll reflect the duality of human nature. They inhabit one body but have separate personalities. Dr. Jekyll represented “good” until he transformed himself into the “evil” Mr. Hyde. But did you ever stop to wonder if Hyde told his side of the story, how different it might be? Surely Mr. Hyde deserves more compassion than he ever received . . . until now. Was he a man, a monster, a murderer . . . or merely a wayward soul? “Born was I . . . ”
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American historian Howard Zinn's book "A People's History of the United States", set off waves of controversy between readers who loved his truthfulness in describing our nation's past and other readers who were dismayed by his writings. How could one historian be praised by one group and condemned by the other? Is there a way to both appreciate and criticize Zinn's school of historiography? "Howard Zinn: A Critique" explores possible answers to this question.
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