Our black people have always been considered inferior. Because one country thinks they are better than the rest of the world. Ethnic groups are doing their utmost to destroy our chances of getting happiness and normality. They used it to deal with us looking at our weaknesses, so we were defeated as race. This leaves us with the only option to express our emotions, that is to learn, and to be oppressed first.
Race, law, literature: They form part of us as Americans and readers. Before learning about Karla FC Holloway's book "Legal Novels: Constituting Race", "Writing Literature" (purchased at Amazon or Duke University), I write to ask for an interview. She agreed generously, this is the result. Thank you for agreeing to this interview, Cala. You are in the beginning of the book, about racial politics, how they are reflected in the strange playfulness of 'living women' and their charm to President Obama's birthplace I talked about something. You continue, "Identity politics is an important aspect of life in the 21st century, at least as it was in the lives of the 19th and 20th centuries." Is that okay? After all, there is no legal form of slavery in the United States, Lynch is no longer a common phenomenon. Can you explain the meaning of "seriousness"?
Interview with Cala FC Hollow, author of "Legal Fiction: Building Race, Writing Literature"
Through literary questions about the concept of 'race', the novel intentionally executed a famous statement of W · E · B · du Bois. The characters in the novel are important players of how the concept of "race" shapes and inhibits personal development and cultural achievement beyond time and space. In our era of singing, the most important role is a member of the large family Daley-Strom. Delia Daley is a daughter of a highly educated and economically successful doctor, William Daley, and his wife Nettie Ellen is a woman who manages the work of William by pulling everything invisibly. Delia has two brothers and two sisters, Charles, Michael, Lucille, Lorraine, and those children also appear in the story. Delia's family is black. Ruth Strom is married to Robert Rider and there are two children, Kwame and Robert (also known as Ode).