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Tracing Development Civil Rights Movement Brown V. Essay

Pages:2 (645 words)

Sources:3

Subject:History

Topic:Civil Rights Movement

Document Type:Essay

Document:#17861650


tracing development Civil Rights Movement Brown v. Board decision Black Power Movement:

Although the Civil Rights Movement goes back several years, it was not until the Brown vs. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas, decision that society actually acknowledged the fact that change was going to happen. In spite of the controversy related to the condition of African-Americans in the U.S., things were critical in the country during the 1950s as the authorities seemed to express little to no interest in these individuals. While some focused on devising non-violent strategies with the purpose of strengthening their position in the country, others got actively involved in promoting active action as one of the most effective methods to achieve their goals.

Racial discrimination was one of the most divisive topics at the half of the twentieth century and the fact that African-Americans experienced significant success in putting across their issues made it possible for the whole world to understand that something needed to change in order for the situation to stabilize. As previously mentioned, the Brown vs. Board of Education ruling generated a lot of controversy and influenced more and more African-Americans to stand up for their rights, even with the fact that many of them were harshly reprimanded for doing so.

The case of Rosa Parks is essential when considering events that inspired individuals to get actively involved in criticizing the American society as a consequence of the attitudes that it employed concerning African-Americans. The fact that the woman was arrested for not wanting to move in the back of the bus (where African-Americans were expected to stay) influenced a black reverend, Martin Luther King, to join the Civil Rights Movement and to make it possible for the majority of individuals in the country to accept that it was no longer acceptable for racial discrimination to exist in the American society (Dierenfield 44).

In spite of the fact that the government slowly but…


Sample Source(s) Used

Works cited:

Dierenfield, Bruce J., "The Civil Rights Movement," (Pearson Education, 01.05.2004)

"The Black Power Movement1968-1980," Retrieved July 27, 2012, from the Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum Website: http://hoover.archives.gov/exhibits/africanamerican/blackpower/index.html

"The Civil Rights Movement, 1954-1963," Retrieved July 27, 2012, from the SMU website: http://faculty.smu.edu/dsimon/Change-Civ%20Rts.html

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