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"We Don't Want Another Black Freedom Movement!" : An Inquiry into the desire for new social movements by comparing how people perceived both the Civil Rights Movement and the Black Power Movement versus the Black Lives Matter MovementHicks, Isaiah Deonte 06 May 2020 (has links)
No description available.
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The School and Society: Secondary School Social Studies Education from 1945-1970Owens, Kevin John 12 July 2013 (has links)
No description available.
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The Creation of an African-American Counterpublic: The Impact of Race, Class, Gender, and Sexuality on Black Radicalism during the Black Freedom Movement, 1965-1981McCoy, Austin C. 13 April 2009 (has links)
No description available.
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Democracy in Action: Community Organizing in Chicago, 1960-1968LaFleur, Renee A. January 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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Fifty-Plus Years Later: Former Students Reflect on the Impact of Learning about the Civil Rights MovementWheeler, Belinda 09 September 2010 (has links)
No description available.
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An Evaluation of the Views of Black Journalists Working at Black Newspapers Concerning the Effects of the Civil Rights Movement on Their Black Newspapers from 1960 to 1985Parson, Rita L. B. 08 1900 (has links)
This study was designed to determine whether black journalists who work at black newspapers in Texas felt the Civil Rights movement had affected their industry. Although black newspapers lost an exclusive market for talent that now must be shared with majority-owned newspapers, this report concludes that the operation of black newspapers virtually was unaffected by the Civil Rights movement. It is recommended that this research serve as a starting point for a continuing examination of black newspapers. It would be particularly beneficial if more information could be gathered from people who have worked at now-defunct black newspapers.
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«Comment continuer de chanter l'Amérique?» : appartenance des Afro-Américains à la nation américaine et victoire de l'intégrationnisme de Martin Luther KingMorin, Charles-Albert 04 1900 (has links)
Comment comprendre la volonté d'appartenir à la nation américaine des Afro-Américains en dépit d'une mémoire faite d'humiliation et d'une accumulation de revers? À plusieurs reprises durant l'histoire américaine, des élites ont proposé à la communauté noire des solutions dites « radicales » qui remettent en question le paradigme dominant de l'intégration à la nation américaine. Ce mémoire tente d'identifier les raisons qui expliquent pourquoi, au cours du mouvement pour les droits civiques, les Noirs font le choix de l'intégration défendu par Martin Luther King et rejettent le séparatisme défendu par Malcolm X. La spécificité du mémoire réside dans l'utilisation de la littérature sur la formation des nations qui me permet d'étudier le choix des Afro-Américains. La nation est vue comme le produit d'une construction qui fait interagir les élites et les masses. J'étudie « par le haut » la façon dont les entrepreneurs ethniques, King et Malcolm X, redéfinissent l'américanité. J'étudie également « par le bas » comment les masses reçoivent les discours de ces élites. Ma première hypothèse se consacre à la formation de l'alliance stratégique entre King et l'exécutif américain qui permet à King de définir l'agenda législatif et d'appuyer son discours sur les gains qu'il réalise. La deuxième hypothèse se penche sur la structure des opportunités s'offrant aux Afro-Américains qui orientent le choix qu'ils font. / How can one understand the African American community's will to belong to the American nation despite a past made of humiliation and an accumulation of setbacks? At several times during American history, elites have proposed so-called « radical » solutions that challenged the dominant paradigm of integration to the American nation. This thesis attempts to identify the reasons why, during the civil rights movement, the black community chose integrationnism championed by Martin Luther King, and rejected separatism advocated by Malcolm X. The specificity of this thesis lies in the use of the literature on the formation of nations, which allowed me to better understand the African American community's choice. The nation is seen as the product of a construction where elites and masses interact. « From the top », I analyzed how ethnic entrepreneurs King and Malcolm X redefined Americanness. « From the bottom », I analyzed how masses received the elites' discourse. My first assumption focuses on the strategic alliance between King and the American executive, which allowed King to define the legislative
agenda and base his speech on actual gains he obtained. The second assumption focuses on the structure of the opportunities for African Americans that oriented the choices they made.
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Le mouvement pour les droits civiques afro-américains au cours de la seconde guerre mondiale : stratégies électorales, politiques et économiquesTrépanier, Alexandre 08 1900 (has links)
La Seconde Guerre mondiale était riche en possibilités d’avancement pour la population noire. Les leaders afro-américains, conscients du caractère favorable du contexte, mirent sur pied de nouvelles stratégies afin d’optimiser les gains afro-américains. L’économie de guerre favorisa les migrations internes vers les centres industriels du Nord et de l’Ouest. Les migrants noirs s’extirpaient donc du carcan contraignant du Sud où ils étaient régulièrement privés de leur droit de vote. Les leaders noirs brandirent alors un nouvel outil pour faire pression sur les deux principaux partis politiques fédéraux : le nouveau poids électoral afro-américain. La période fut aussi marquée par une hausse de l’activisme noir. Celui-ci se voyait légitimé par les idéaux de liberté et de démocratie prétendument défendus par les États-Unis. Finalement, le plein-emploi permit l’essor du statut économique noir et les leaders afro-américains tentèrent d’exploiter cette conjoncture particulière afin d’en faire bénéficier leur communauté à long terme. / The Second World War was a period of opportunities for African-Americans. The Black leadership, aware of the favorable context, tried to exploit it to the fullest. Internal migrations from the South to the industrial centers of the North and West were facilitated by the war economy. Participating in this exodus, Blacks extirpated themselves from the politically constrictive region that often deprived them of their voting rights. By the end of the war, African-American leaders were able to wield a new weapon to pressure political parties and the government: the electoral weight of Blacks in northern States. The war was also characterized by heightened black activism. The ideals of democracy and liberty defended by the U.S. provided a new legitimacy to African-American yearnings. Ultimately, the full-employment that resulted from the war allowed Blacks to improve their economic status while their leaders were actively working to secure these gains in the long term.
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Defending Desire: Resident Activists in New Orleans‟ Desire Housing Project, 1956-1980Matsumaru, Takashi Michael 04 August 2011 (has links)
The Desire Housing Project opened in 1956 as a segregated public housing development in New Orleans‟ Upper Ninth Ward. The Desire neighborhood, one of the few neighborhoods in the city where black homeownership had been encouraged, was transformed by the project. Hundreds of former Desire residents were displaced by the mammoth project, which became home to more than 13,000 residents by 1958. Built on what had once been a landfill, the Desire Housing Project came to epitomize the worst in public housing, before it was torn down by 2001. Although the project was isolated from the rest of the city and lacked basic services, residents worked to create a viable community, in spite of the pitfalls of segregation. Within the context of the civil rights movement, Desire residents fought to bring in basic services, pushing local government to more fully develop their neighborhood.
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"Pray for Me and My Kids": Correspondence between Rural Black Women and White Northern Women During the Civil Rights MovementWalker, Pamela N 15 May 2015 (has links)
This paper examines the experiences of rural black women in Mississippi during the Civil Rights Movement by examining correspondence of the grassroots anti-poverty organization the Box Project. The Box Project, founded in 1962 by white Vermont resident and radical activist Virginia Naeve, provided direct relief to black families living in Mississippi but also opened positive and clandestine lines of communication between southern black women and outsiders, most often white women. The efforts of the Box Project have been largely left out of the dialogue surrounding Civil Rights, which has often been dominated by leading figures, major events and national organizations. This paper seeks to understand the discreet but effective ways in which some black women, though constrained by motherhood, abject poverty, and rural isolation participated in the Civil Rights Movement, and how black and white women worked together to chip away at the foundations of inequality that Jim Crow produced.
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