Midlands State University Library
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Blue eyes, brown eyes : a cautionary tale of race and brutality / created by Stephen G. Bloom.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: University of California Press, 2021Copyright date: ©2021Description: xviii, 263 pages : illustrations ; 23 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9780520382268
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • LA2317.E44 BLO
Contents:
Author's note : The scab -- Prologue : the tonight show -- The corn -- Dirty little bastards -- Pizzui -- Elysian -- Memphis to Riceville -- The experiment -- "Did she really?" -- "Here's Johnny!" -- Back home -- What the kids said -- Rotarians -- Eye of the storm -- The White House -- Trouble -- Blackboard jungle -- Spooner -- A blind spot -- Class reunion -- The offer -- Unleashed -- Oprah -- The greater good -- The caravan -- Afterword : the case of Robert Coles and the others -- Coda : Andy's and the ville -- Appendix : universities & colleges where Jane Elliot has delivered lectures.
Summary: "The day after Martin Luther King, Jr.'s assassination, Jane Elliott, a third-grade schoolteacher in rural Iowa, tried out a shocking experiment to show the scorching impact of racism on children. Elliott separated her students according to the color of their. Those with brown eyes would lord over those with blue eyes. The brown-eyed students were given permission to heckle and berate the blue-eyed students, even to start fights with them. The Blue-Eyed, Brown-Eyed Experiment would become world famous. Elliott would go on to appear on Johnny Carson's Tonight Show, followed by a stormy White House conference, and tens of thousands of media events and diversity training sessions around the world. Elliott taught "Black Lives Matter" fifty years before the phrase was ever uttered. Yet the small town where Elliott began the incendiary experiment never forgot or forgave her. She paid a price for her hard-fought fame. But was Elliott the benign and enlightened mother of diversity she claimed to be? The damage she caused still reverberates. An indelible, confounding portrait of a woman driven to succeed, set against the backdrop of a proud and upright farming community"--
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book Book Main Library Open Shelf LA2317.E44 BLO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 158613 Available BK146294
Book Book Main Library Open Shelf LA2317.E44 BLO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 158614 Available BK146361
Book Book Main Library Open Shelf LA2317.E44 BLO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 158615 Available BK146276
Book Book Main Library Open Shelf LA2317.E44 BLO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 158616 Available BK146347
Book Book Main Library Open Shelf LA2317.E44 BLO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 158617 Available BK146310

Includes index.

Author's note : The scab -- Prologue : the tonight show -- The corn -- Dirty little bastards -- Pizzui -- Elysian -- Memphis to Riceville -- The experiment -- "Did she really?" -- "Here's Johnny!" -- Back home -- What the kids said -- Rotarians -- Eye of the storm -- The White House -- Trouble -- Blackboard jungle -- Spooner -- A blind spot -- Class reunion -- The offer -- Unleashed -- Oprah -- The greater good -- The caravan -- Afterword : the case of Robert Coles and the others -- Coda : Andy's and the ville -- Appendix : universities & colleges where Jane Elliot has delivered lectures.

"The day after Martin Luther King, Jr.'s assassination, Jane Elliott, a third-grade schoolteacher in rural Iowa, tried out a shocking experiment to show the scorching impact of racism on children. Elliott separated her students according to the color of their. Those with brown eyes would lord over those with blue eyes. The brown-eyed students were given permission to heckle and berate the blue-eyed students, even to start fights with them. The Blue-Eyed, Brown-Eyed Experiment would become world famous. Elliott would go on to appear on Johnny Carson's Tonight Show, followed by a stormy White House conference, and tens of thousands of media events and diversity training sessions around the world. Elliott taught "Black Lives Matter" fifty years before the phrase was ever uttered. Yet the small town where Elliott began the incendiary experiment never forgot or forgave her. She paid a price for her hard-fought fame. But was Elliott the benign and enlightened mother of diversity she claimed to be? The damage she caused still reverberates. An indelible, confounding portrait of a woman driven to succeed, set against the backdrop of a proud and upright farming community"--

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