Lockstep and Dance: Images of Black Men in Popular Culture (Margaret Walker Alexander Series in Afri

Lockstep and Dance: Images of Black Men in Popular Culture. Front Cover . in Popular Culture Margaret Walker Alexander series in African American studies.
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This book is designed for people struggling to understand this highly prevalent disorder as well as other related syndromes. Chapters cover the symptoms of panic disorder and related problems. Other chapters detail the behavior and effects of panic disorder and outline the latest treatments. The final chapters of the book explore the ongoing search for a more complete understanding and more consistent cures for anxiety syndromes.

For both the afflicted and family members helping a patient recover and attain peace of mind, Understanding Panic and Other Anxiety Disorders provides a valuable sourcebook. Benjamin Root is in private practice at Mississippi Neuropsychiatric Clinic in Ridgeland, Mississippi, and is a clinical assistant professor in the department of psychiatry and human behavior at the University of Mississippi School of Medicine.


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    Margaret Walker Alexander Series in African American Studies

    Your rating has been recorded. Write a review Rate this item: Preview this item Preview this item. Linda G Tucker Publisher: University Press of Mississippi, Margaret Walker Alexander series in African American studies. Find a copy online Links to this item ebrary. Allow this favorite library to be seen by others Keep this favorite library private.

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    Find a copy in the library Finding libraries that hold this item Document, Internet resource Document Type: Linda G Tucker Find more information about: Of equal importance are the ways in which black men battle against, respond to, and become implicated in the production and circulation of these images. Tucker cites examples ranging from Michael Jordan's underwear commercials and the popular Barbershop movies, to the career of rapper Tupac Shakur and John Edgar Wideman's memoir Brothers and Keepers.


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    Lockstep and Dance tracks the continuity between historical images of African American men, the peculiar constitution of whites' anxieties about black men, and black men's tolerance of and resistance to the reproduction of such images. The legacy of these stereotypes is still apparent in contemporary advertising, film, music, and professional basketball.

    Lockstep and Dance argues persuasively that these cultural images reinforce the idea of black men as prisoners of American justice and of their own minds but also shows how black men struggle against this imprisonment. Tucker is an assistant professor of English at Southern Arkansas University.

    To acknowledge this critique of representations of black men in popular culture, one must accept the premise that all black men live in a "prison writ large" in the US. This pedantic, reductionist work victimizes black men and illustrates aesthetic resistance to racism.

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    What it fails to illustrate is the everyday resistance of average black men and the participation of some black male artists in perpetuating stereotypes. Tucker English, Southern Arkansas Univ. Her selectivity in proving her thesis is problematic, particularly when she discusses black male stereotypes in television and print advertising. Several potentially offensive ads are not sufficient to make an effective argument.

    The author's analysis of lateth- and earlyth-century popular culture--specifically the chapter on minstrelsy, lynching, and white lore cycles--is the strongest element in the book.