The legacy of the ‘real’ Martin Luther King Jr.
Sociology professor Darryl Brice visited Spokane Community College on Thursday, Jan. 17, 2018, to discuss the ways in which key pieces of Martin Luther King Jr.’s legacy have been omitted from public discourse.
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Darryl Brice, a sociology professor from Highline College in Des Moines, Washington, visited Spokane Community College on Thursday, Jan. 17, 2018, to discuss the ways in which key pieces of Martin Luther King Jr.’s legacy have been omitted from public discourse. Brice’s lecture was titled “Bread and Circuses: Exploring the Legacy of the ‘Real’ Martin Luther King Jr.”
Dan Pelle The Spokesman-Review Buy this photo
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Darryl Brice, a sociology professor from Highline College in Des Moines, Washington, visited Spokane Community College on Thursday, Jan. 17, 2018, to discuss the ways in which key pieces of Martin Luther King Jr.’s legacy have been omitted from public discourse. Brice’s lecture was titled “Bread and Circuses: Exploring the Legacy of the ‘Real’ Martin Luther King Jr.”
Dan Pelle The Spokesman-Review Buy this photo
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“Bread and Circuses: Exploring the Legacy of the ‘Real’ Martin Luther King Jr.” is the title of the presentation by Darryl Brice, Ph.D., he delivered, Thursday, Jan. 17, 2019, at Spokane Community College. Brice explored why a myopic view of King has become the most popular and accepted version of the civil rights leader and what is omitted from most dialogues about Kings life and legacy.
Dan Pelle The Spokesman-Review Buy this photo
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