People are often caught at crossroads in matters of what is right and what is wrong. When is it right to strictly follow manmade rules and when is it right to balk at red tapes? Decisions are not always clear-cut black and white. The heart should sometimes be allowed to rule the head. After all, is it not love that makes the world keep going round? And yet rules are made for some very good reasons.
Through diligent research and modern technological innovations, man is able to breach the six hundred light years to Keplar 22b, a planet very similar to earth, ready-made for habitation and yet uninhabited. Keplar 22b seems to be the ideal solution to the teeming population problems of Mother Earth but there is a problem: the astronauts return with a plague and people die in hundreds of thousands. On the brink of extinction, no one has the answers until some people make some serendipitous discoveries which converts the status of cockroaches from pests to priceless commodities...
To be considered innocent is to be viewed as vulnerable to harm and worthy of protection from harm. An innocent person’s pain is recognized, acknowledged, and addressed. Mediated Misogynoir: Erasing Black Women’s and Girls’ Innocence in the Public Imagination interrogates contemporary media culture to illuminate the ways the intersections of anti-blackness and misogyny, i.e., misogynoir, converge to obscure public perceptions of Black women and girls as people with any claim to innocence. When pained images of Black female bodies appear on media devices, the socio-political responses are telling, not only in their lack of urgency, but also in their inability to be read empathetically. By examining viral videos, memes, and recent film and television, Kalima Young makes a striking case for the need to create a new Black feminist media studies framework broad enough to hold the complexity and agency of Black women and girls in a digital age invested in framing them as inherently adulterated and impure.
They did everything right. They never moved alone but as a group, in broad daylight, on well-traveled routes, not deviating from where they were supposed to be, and yet, within sight of school, and not far away from home, nineteen girls got kidnapped! They had not invited it in any way, they did not bargain for the helpless, hopeless situation in which they found themselves. The question was how much of their previous training they could count on to survive or escape if they ever got the opportunity to do so.
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