Oakland Journal Number 25: Winter 2015
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Item Remembering Seamus Heany: Poetry and the Historians(Oakland University, 2015-01-01) Moran, Seán Farrell; Clason, Christopher; Garfinkle, DavidTribute to poet Seamus HeaneyItem Cover, Statement of Purpose, Table of Contents(Oakland University, 2015-01-01) Clason, Christopher; Garfinkle, DavidItem Individual Decision for a Science Education: Path for Growth(Oakland University, 2015-01-01) Sanches, Fabio Iunes; Clason, Christopher; Garfinkle, DavidMicroeconomics role in college students career decisions.Item What Return on Their Investment Can Oakland Students Expect?(Oakland University, 2015-01-01) Folland, Sherman T.; Clason, Christopher; Garfinkle, DavidData from Payscale Inc. and commentary from author about Oakland University students possible return on their investment in employment field.Item Bar Scene(Oakland University, 2015-01-01) Murphy, Brian; Clason, Christopher; Garfinkle, DavidItem Contributors(Oakland University, 2015-01-01) Clason, Christopher; Garfinkle, DavidOakland Journal Issue 25 contributors listItem Book Review: Three Steps to the Universe: From the Sun to Black Holes to the Mystery of Dark Matter(Oakland University, 2015-01-01) Lindemann, Charles B.; Clason, Christopher; Garfinkle, DavidReview of book Three Steps to the Universe by brothers David and Richard GarfinkleItem The Way We Were(Brown, Judith. "The Way We Were" Oakland Journal 25 (2015). 89-91, 2015-01-01) Brown, Judith; Clason, Christopher; Garfinkle, DavidAuthors college and career recollections during the mid twentieth centuryItem Visitation of New Hope(Oakland University, 2015-01-01) Clifton, Yeaton; Clason, Christopher; Garfinkle, DavidPersonal narrative of author and their relationship with a homeless shelter resident.Item I Am Not My Hair(Oakland University, 2015-01-01) Turner, Feliece; Clason, Christopher; Garfinkle, DavidPeople in society often base their identity on the way they look, modeling themselves after images seen in the media. Constructed through cultural ideals, image as identity has be come the basis for determining societal norms. In this research I use Black feminist theory to show how hair in the Black community has become a contributing factor when determining standards of identity through image, as well as through cultural acceptance of what it means to be Black. Through autoethnography I analyze the ways in which societal, cultural, gendered and media norms control race representations based on hair.