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<Article>
<Journal>
				<PublisherName>University of Tehran
Published jointly with Iranian World Studies Association</PublisherName>
				<JournalTitle>Journal of World Sociopolitical Studies</JournalTitle>
				<Issn>2588-3119</Issn>
				<Volume></Volume>
				<Issue>Articles in Press</Issue>
				<PubDate PubStatus="epublish">
					<Year>2026</Year>
					<Month>01</Month>
					<Day>13</Day>
				</PubDate>
			</Journal>
<ArticleTitle>The Impact of the Black Lives Matter Movement on Angie Thomas’s The Hate U Give: A Critical Race Theory Analysis</ArticleTitle>
<VernacularTitle></VernacularTitle>
			<FirstPage></FirstPage>
			<LastPage></LastPage>
			<ELocationID EIdType="pii">105503</ELocationID>
			
<ELocationID EIdType="doi">10.22059/wsps.2026.404327.1560</ELocationID>
			
			<Language>EN</Language>
<AuthorList>
<Author>
					<FirstName>Elham</FirstName>
					<LastName>Omrani</LastName>
<Affiliation>PhD Candidate of English Literature, University of Tehran, Tehran, Iran.</Affiliation>

</Author>
<Author>
					<FirstName>Seyed Mohammad</FirstName>
					<LastName>Marandi</LastName>
<Affiliation>Professor of English Language and Literature, University of Tehran, Tehran, Iran.</Affiliation>

</Author>
<Author>
					<FirstName>Maryam</FirstName>
					<LastName>Soltan Beyad</LastName>
<Affiliation>Associate Professor of English  Language and Literature, University of Tehran, Iran</Affiliation>

</Author>
</AuthorList>
				<PublicationType>Journal Article</PublicationType>
			<History>
				<PubDate PubStatus="received">
					<Year>2025</Year>
					<Month>10</Month>
					<Day>14</Day>
				</PubDate>
			</History>
		<Abstract>The chronic problem of police brutality against Black communities prompted the Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement. Rising protests revealed that the killings of African Americans were not isolated events, but symptoms of a system of racial injustice. Literature, in this respect, emerged as an important locus through which marginalized groups voice counter-narratives that oppose hegemonic racial logics and stereotypical representations of Blackness as criminality. While the sociopolitical implications of BLM have been thoroughly analyzed, there has been relatively less scholarly focus on how African-American Young Adult Literature (YAL) engages with, rearticulates, and negotiates these discourses. This article bridges that gap by subjecting Angie Thomas’s The Hate U Give to the hotly debated Critical Race Theory to examine how the novel engages with the ideas of BLM and illuminates the structural dimensions of racism in America. The critique indicates that Thomas constructs a counter-narrative revolving around systemic racism, racial profiling, police brutality, white privilege, implicit bias, and the intersection of race with other forms of marginalization. Situating the novel in literary and activist contexts, this study highlights YAL’s potential to mirror, challenge, and redefine cultural consciousness, thus positioning the genre as an essential site of contemporary social justice activism.</Abstract>
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			<Param Name="value">Angie Thomas</Param>
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			<Param Name="value">Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement</Param>
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			<Param Name="value">Counter-Narratives</Param>
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			<Object Type="keyword">
			<Param Name="value">Critical Race Theory (CRT)</Param>
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			<Param Name="value">Police brutality</Param>
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			<Param Name="value">The Hate U Give</Param>
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			<Param Name="value">Young Adult Literature</Param>
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