Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on Horowitz's Hating Whitey. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 6 page paper examines a book by David Horowitz which delves into the area of America's bigotry. Are white people really against blacks, and vice versa? The author says no and yes respectively. The book is critiqued. Several specific references are included. No additional sources cited.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RT13_SA508DH.rtf
Buy This Term Paper »
 
Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
not hard. He writes about a black professor who wants to kill the white man (Horowitz, 1999, 31). He writes about a minister who wants to destroy "whiteness" (1999, 44).
Clearly, there are black bigots just as there are white bigots. To an extent, all David Horowitz does in his volume entitled Hating Whitey is to expose them. Yet, the
intent of the work is to send a message which is that there is a hatred of white people and that black people blame everything on the white world.
Horowitz takes a microcosm of black America--many black Americans are ordinary citizens who get along with everyone--and tries to make generalizations from there. This is not good social science.
His observations may be on target, but his misuse of them, which is to exemplify black America, is simply not accurate. In a chapter entitled "Racial Paranoia" the author focuses
on the story of the loss of Bill and Camille Cosbys son (Horowitz, 1999, 17). Most people have heard that this nice young man was gunned down on a
highway. It made headlines at the time. Horowitz relays the fact that about a year after the incident, Camille wrote an article about how she believes that hatred against black
people in the country to some extent played a role in the death of her son (1999, 17). He compares the case to that of OJ Simpson where there was
jury nullification (1999, 17). He goes on to explain that in the case of Cosbys killer, there was swift justice (1999, 17-18). In essence, the author summarizes the case and
claims that the fact that the killer was caught and prosecuted should be satisfactory for Camille. The author also goes through the case, and relays the fact that the
...