David L. Smith (1986-1987). «Amiri Baraka and the Black Arts of Black Art». boundary 2(en inglés) (Duke University Press) 15 (1/2): 235, 239. ISSN0190-3659. doi:10.2307/303432. Consultado el 23 de abril de 2023. «or his equally uncompromising Marxist-Leninist views [...] The most explicit example of this problem is Baraka's poem "Black People! " written in 1966 and published in 1967. "Black People! " presents itself as an exhortation to black folks to riot and loot [...] more ominously, he writes: "We must make our own/ World, man, our own world, and we cannot do this unless the white man/ is dead. Let's get together and kill him my man."».
David L. Smith (1986-1987). «Amiri Baraka and the Black Arts of Black Art». boundary 2(en inglés) (Duke University Press) 15 (1/2): 235, 239. ISSN0190-3659. doi:10.2307/303432. Consultado el 23 de abril de 2023. «or his equally uncompromising Marxist-Leninist views [...] The most explicit example of this problem is Baraka's poem "Black People! " written in 1966 and published in 1967. "Black People! " presents itself as an exhortation to black folks to riot and loot [...] more ominously, he writes: "We must make our own/ World, man, our own world, and we cannot do this unless the white man/ is dead. Let's get together and kill him my man."».
jstor.org
David L. Smith (1986-1987). «Amiri Baraka and the Black Arts of Black Art». boundary 2(en inglés) (Duke University Press) 15 (1/2): 235, 239. ISSN0190-3659. doi:10.2307/303432. Consultado el 23 de abril de 2023. «or his equally uncompromising Marxist-Leninist views [...] The most explicit example of this problem is Baraka's poem "Black People! " written in 1966 and published in 1967. "Black People! " presents itself as an exhortation to black folks to riot and loot [...] more ominously, he writes: "We must make our own/ World, man, our own world, and we cannot do this unless the white man/ is dead. Let's get together and kill him my man."».