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Lisa Williamson [1] (born 1964), [2] [3] known as Sister Souljah, is an American author, activist, rapper, and film producer. She gained significant attention in 1992, when Bill Clinton , running as the presumptive Democratic Party nominee for President of the United States , criticized her remarks about race in the United States.
Sister Souljah in 1997. The term originated in the 1992 presidential candidacy of Bill Clinton. [3] In a Washington Post interview published on May 13, 1992, the hip hop MC, author, and political activist Sister Souljah was quoted as saying (in response to the question regarding black-on-white violence in the 1992 Los Angeles riots):
Sister Souljah believes the splitting of fiction as such is a result of the exclusionary hierarchy of literature that sidelines authors of color. [4] Sister Souljah told The Root in an interview, "I'm not in sync with this street-lit genre. I think that when European authors or Euro-American authors write about urban, suburban or rural areas ...
Tracking Kamala Harris' Policy Reversals: A Comprehensive List Of Key Issue Flip-flops. Maher explained that former President Obama also had a "Sister Souljah moment" when he denounced a reverend ...
If he aims for the center by staging a “Sister Souljah moment” at the left’s expense, he might hemorrhage votes to West or Stein, or both. There’s another problem.
The comedian, actress, and author of 'Leslie F*cking Jones' on Sister Souljah, 'Kindred,' and the Book That Should be on Every College Syllabus.
Midnight: A Gangster Love Story originally scheduled to be published October 14, 2008, is a novel by Sister Souljah that was published November 4, 2008, by Atria/Simon and Schuster. [1] [2] It is a prequel of The Coldest Winter Ever (1999), the novel that spawned the contemporary street literature movement.
He seized his own Sister Souljah moment — with the original Sister Souljah herself. He made it clear he would be a president for all Americans, not just those who were Democrats or those who ...