In: Economics
Pertains to economics
I'm doing an essay on Ta-Nehisi 'The Case for Reparations'
Please list five sources that would support his stance
Each source has to be MLA formatted entry plus the following
2 to 4 sentences to summarize the main idea(s) of the item, and
2 sentences to relate the article to your research topic.
Therefore, each source would have a 2-4 sentence summary and at least 2 more sentences about how that applies to my essay
The research is over the Ta-Nehisi 'The Case for Reparations' which shows the narrative story of the Clyde Ross (Rambsy). That can connect with the Mississippi to Chicago that can also be a trajectory Coates to further describe the. Ross, and with the son of Mississippi sharecropper, that would work in terms of material wealth and how it would land into the father which can attain it forcibly per the stripped to work over the local white authorities (Brooks )
To further work per the Civil War that can work in terms of a bill about reparations which can work of the Congress for thirty years (Jaffe-Notier). It would work per the reparations for slavery and legalized discrimination that can connect with the major discussion depending on the Democratic Presidential candidates (King). Depending on that can work over the forms reparations that can help to understand the Democratic candidates to work over the very different from “The Case for Reparations” which have been written (Coates).
References
Brooks, David, and N. Y. Times. "The case for reparations." New York Times (2019).
Coates, Ta-Nehisi. We were eight years in power: An American tragedy. One World/Ballantine, 2018.
Jaffe-Notier, Tamara, and Carol Friedman. "Content Matters--Teaching" The Case For Reparations," 9-12." (2017).
King, Richard H. "Elegiac essays on the first black president: Ta-Nehisi Coates, We Were Eight Years in Power: An American Tragedy. New York: One World Publishing 2017. xvii+ 369pp. 28, 18 pbk. ISBN: 978-0-399-59056-6, 978-0-399-59057-3 pbk." (2019): 421-425.
Rambsy, Howard. "The Remarkable Reception of Ta-Nehisi Coates." African American Review 49.3 (2016): 196-204.