Museum of Resistance and Resilience Main MenuPraxis #1: Curation and Annotation (Group Project)details of Praxis #1 assignmentPraxis #1.1 War, Memory, And Identity: Beyond Victims and Voice Museum of Resistance and ResilienceProfessor Marjory Wentworth Honor's Class at College of CharlestonPraxis #2 Media Intervention, Multimedia Essay (Individual Project)Entry 2 in our Museum of Resistance and ResiliencePraxis #3 Manifesto of Future Resistance and ResilienceMedia Intervention/Media PostsFinal Course Reflection - A Letter to the FutureDue November 18Vicki Callahanf68c37bed83f129872c0216fae5c9d063d9e11baLisa Müller-Tredecc71af55f5122020f2b95396300e25feb73b6995
1
12020-11-13T00:39:01-08:00Madeline Feng6c9aff376b328d3c03fc74d328de4d678ef5c0e9377842plain2020-11-13T00:39:24-08:00Madeline Feng6c9aff376b328d3c03fc74d328de4d678ef5c0e9In the movie Black Panther, while the King's brother N'Jobu was on an undercover mission, the outside word radicalized him after witnessing his people being mistreated, discriminated against, incarcerated and over-policed. N'Jobu responds with betrayal which was basically selling Wakanda's vibranium, however, with good intentions to help them resist. However, violent approaches should not be taken and practiced under the context of our contemporary society, with all our communities being interconnected, and according to Audre Lorde, there is never a single-issue struggle.
Contents of this annotation:
1media/week3-1_thumb.png2020-11-13T00:38:26-08:00Madeline Feng6c9aff376b328d3c03fc74d328de4d678ef5c0e9Madeline Praxis 3 Week 3 Media 11Screenshotmedia/week3-1.pngplain2020-11-13T00:38:26-08:00Coogler, R. (2018). Black Panther. Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures.Madeline Feng6c9aff376b328d3c03fc74d328de4d678ef5c0e9