Answer:
This means that no matter whether poor or dark coloured, all men are equal
Answer:
Audre Lorde quickly became the best known out-of-the-closet Black radical lesbian feminist. Lorde deeply politicized every aspect of herself, including her fight with cancer. She was an African-American poet who wrote poetry exploring the relationships between lovers, children and parents, and friends in both a very personal and a socially relevant manner. She was a feminist poet who challenged racial and sexual stereotypes.
Answer:
Homer Plessy
Explanation:
He sat in the "whites-only" passenger car. When the conductor came to collect his ticket, Plessy told him that he was 7/8 white and that he refused to sit in the "blacks-only" car. Plessy was immediately arrested by Detective Chris C. Cain, put into the Orleans Parish jail, and released the next day on a $500 bond.
Whoa, that's a lot of Beatles questions all at once! Allow me to pick just one for a response here. "What role did television play in the Beatles' success?"
Television allowed the Beatles to reach a mass audience across America. The Ed Sullivan Show had a huge audience in the United States at that time. Back in the 1960s, the only television was network broadcast television. There were no cable channels. No Netflix. No Hulu. No Amazon Prime. No Youtube. So if you made an appearance on a major network show like The Ed Sullivan Show, you were reaching all TV viewers in America. When the Beatles made their first appearance on American television, on the Ed Sullivan Show on February 9, 1964, they were seen by an estimated 73 million American viewers. That's a huge audience. Not quite Super Bowl numbers (which reach around 100 million), but still huge. For comparison, the most-watched episode of a hit cable program like The Walking Dead (its season 7 premiere) got 17 million viewers.
So, for sure, the dynamics of television in the 1960s helped the Beatles become an enormous success in the American entertainment market.