Citations:deniggerization


 * 1969, Sarah Webster Fabio, "Going Home", Black World/Negro Digest, March 1969, p. 55
 * John O. Killens, writer-in-residence at Fisk, has identified the problem of the century and the main job of the Black Revolution as that of the "deniggerization of the world."
 * 1970, Summerhill, for and against, p. 144
 * Touched off by a psychic contagion from the blacks, a broad process of deniggerization is spreading through America's white young, many of whom have been newly freed to develope personal and cultural identity.
 * 1972, Sepia, Volume 21, Sepia Publishing Company, p. 16
 * Black artists would lead the movement of our deniggerization, I naively thought.
 * 1996, Carl Upchurch, Convicted in the Womb: One Man's Journey from Prisoner to Peacemaker, Bantam Books ISBN 9780553097269
 * Deniggerization is meaningless unless we acknowledge our role in perpetuating niggerization.
 * 1997, Clarence Lusane, Race in the Global Era: African Americans at the Millennium, South End Press ISBN 9780896085732, p. 71
 * The deniggerization and then reniggerization of O.J. Simpson exposes the racist underbelly of "color blindness" and its ultimate inability to be blind to color.
 * 2007, Postcolonialism and Political Theory (edited by Nalini Persram), Lexington Books ISBN 9780739159354, p. 149
 * Henry explains that at the core of Du Bois's phenomenological inquity is a concern for the "deniggerization of Africana identities, the full recognition of the humanity of Africana peoples, and also of their cultural contributions to the shared problems of human ontogenesis"
 * 2010, The Dr. Huey P. Newton Foundation (edited by David Hilliard), The Black Panther Party: Service to the People Programs, UNM Press ISBN 9780826343956, p. 9
 * This awakening was the deniggerization of Black people—the process of turning scared, intimidated, helpless folk into bold, brave, hopeful people willing to live and die for Black freedom.