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126 result(s) for "Civil defense Juvenile literature."
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W. E. B. Du Bois and the Fourth Dimension
Within six words, the Post names the all-but-absent legal defense for this family who were only appointed counsel the day of the trial; the kangaroo court status of their day-long trial and summary jury verdict (Martin 1985, 252); the relative absence of juvenile justice during segregation; the criminalization of black bodies; and the premature black death hastened in segregation.2 Cast by the Pittsburgh Courier in 1948 as \"the story of the year,\" (Martin 1985, 251) the Ingram case attracted national attention (garnering the sympathy of black readers who pledged support for the legal defense and care of Ingram and her indigent family) and intensified black civil rights campaigns waged through the NAACP and other black political organs (Martin 1985, 251-68). According to Du Bois, black semicoloniality begs our attention, not simply out of sympathetic or empathetic identification, but precisely because discriminatory policies leech, bleed into, withhold, and imperil the rights and lives of colored foreigners living in, or traveling through, the United States (Du Bois 1947, 13).