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75 Readings, 9/e
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Malcolm X

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Buscemi, 75 Readings, 9/e

Malcolm X

Biographical

The Official Web Site of Malcolm Xfeatures a biography, a timeline, some quotes, a eulogy, and a library. (Consider this, though: What makes this website "official"?)

The homepage of the Malcolm X Project at Columbia University offers photos and a hyperlinked biography. (Consider: Would you feel more or less comfortable using this site in your work than the one above? Why?)

Check out this hyperlinked bio from Wikipedia.com, which also has a photo.

Bibliographical

This page from BrotherMalcolm.net has links to twenty-four of his speeches in RealAudio.

Cornell University's Africana Library provides an excellent listing of resources on Malcolm X.

Cultural

If you'd like to put Malcolm X's work into a historical context, you will want to know something about the Civil Rights Movement in the U.S. To get you started, here's a good general introduction to segregation and Jim Crow from The Columbia Encyclopedia, as well as some related links.

CNN.com's historical timeline on the Nation of Islam starts in 1930 and continues to the present.

As you probably know, Malcolm X changed his name because he considered the name his parents gave him to be a slave name. To put this issue into a historical context, consult this chronology of U.S. statutes concerning slavery.