1answer.
Ask question
Login Signup
Ask question
All categories
  • English
  • Mathematics
  • Social Studies
  • Business
  • History
  • Health
  • Geography
  • Biology
  • Physics
  • Chemistry
  • Computers and Technology
  • Arts
  • World Languages
  • Spanish
  • French
  • German
  • Advanced Placement (AP)
  • SAT
  • Medicine
  • Law
  • Engineering
Harrizon [31]
3 years ago
14

What viewpoints emerged during the early civil rights movement ?

History
1 answer:
Basile [38]3 years ago
3 0

Answer:

Explanation:

When most Americans think of the Civil Rights Movement, they have in mind a span of time beginning with the 1954 Supreme Court’s decision in Brown v. Board of Education, which outlawed segregated education, or the Montgomery Bus Boycott and culminated in the late 1960s or early 1970s. The movement encompassed both ad hoc local groups and established organizations like the  

 

National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), and the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC). Despite the fact that they were not always united around strategy and tactics and drew members from different classes and backgrounds, the movement nevertheless cohered around the aim of eliminating the system of Jim Crow segregation and the reform of some of the worst aspects of racism in American institutions and life.

Much of our memory of the Civil Rights Movement of the 1950s and 1960s is embodied in dramatic photographs, newsreels, and recorded speeches, which America encountered in daily papers and the nightly news. As the movement rolled across the nation, Americans absorbed images of hopeful, disciplined, and dedicated young people shaping their destinies. They were met with hostility,  

S

federal ambivalence and indifference, as well as mob and police violence. African Americans fought back with direct action protests and keen political organizing, such as voter registration drives and the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party. The crowning achievements were the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965. The images are alternately angering and inspiring, powerful, iconic even. However, by themselves they cannot tell the history of the Civil Rights Movement. They need to be contextualized.

The NAACP’s anti-lynching campaign of the 1930s combined widespread publicity about the causes and costs of lynching, a successful drive to defeat Supreme Court nominee John J. Parker for his white supremacist and anti-union views and then defeat senators who voted for confirmation, and a skillful effort to lobby Congress and the Roosevelt administration to pass a federal anti-lynching law. Southern senators filibustered, but they could not prevent the formation of a national consensus against lynching; by 1938 the number of lynchings declined steeply. Other organizations, such as the left-wing National Negro Congress, fought lynching, too, but the NAACP emerged from the campaign as the most influential civil rights organization in national politics and maintained that position through the mid-1950s.

 

The campaign for desegregated education was part of a larger struggle to reshape the contours of America—in terms of race, but also in the ways political and economic power is exercised in this country. Plans for the legal campaign that culminated with Brown were sketched in 1929 by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Charles Hamilton Houston, the black attorney most responsible for developing the legal theory underpinning Brown, focused on segregated education because he believed that it was the concentrated expression of all the inequalities blacks endured.

Houston was unabashed: lawyers were either social engineers or they were parasites. He desired equal access to education, but he also was concerned with the type of society blacks were trying to integrate. He was among those who surveyed American society and saw racial inequality and the ruling powers that promoted racism to divide black workers from white workers. Because he believed that racial violence in Depression-era America was so pervasive as to make mass direct action untenable, he emphasized the redress of grievances through the courts.

The designers of the Brown strategy developed a potent combination of gradualism in legal matters and advocacy of far-reaching change in other political arenas. Through the 1930s and much of the 1940s, the NAACP initiated suits that dismantled aspects of the edifice of segregated education, each building on the precedent of the previous one. Not until the late 1940s did the NAACP believe it politically feasible to challenge directly the constitutionality of “separate but equal” education itself. Concurrently, civil rights organizations backed efforts to radically alter the balance of power between employers and workers in the United States. They paid special attention to forming an alliance with organized labor, whose history of racial exclusion angered blacks. In the 1930s, the National Negro Congress brought blacks into the newly formed United Steel Workers, and the union paid attention to the particular demands of African Americans. The NAACP assisted the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, the largest black labor organization of its day.

You might be interested in
What did George W. Bush mean when he used the term Axis of Evil in his Sate of Union address on January 29, 2002? What countries
Mars2501 [29]

Answer:i don't

Explanation: now i just now

5 0
3 years ago
The most important means of the transportation created during the age of imperialism was
bija089 [108]
Ships.  
Sea transportation was just right at that time as it can carry loots, spoils of war , enough fire power to conquer new colonies, and also food and necessities for sojourners ,seafaring soldiers and traders. Even exploration of unknown territories was also done with the help of sea transportation.
8 0
3 years ago
All of the citizens in a community take an equal role in local government
never [62]

Answer:

d. the increasing interdependence of citizens and nations across the world. ... National sovereignty can best be described as a political entity's right to ... the government has unlimited power—controlling all sectors of society and every aspect ... she plays a role in the democratic process because she votes in every election.

8 0
2 years ago
What was the human cost of the industrial Revolution?
sergeinik [125]

Answer:

The poorer areas of the cities were characterised by overcrowded, badly built, unsanitary living accommodation, and filthy streets. Cholera, carried by dirty water, killed 16,000 Londoners in 1849 alone, and smallpox, scarlet fever, typhus, scurvy and rickets were rife.

3 0
2 years ago
When and how did the Nazis decide to murder the Jews under their control?
WINSTONCH [101]

Answer:

During the invasion of Poland in 1939 the Nazis chose to put Jews under their control in camps.

Explanation:

Hitler envisioned a new Europe to pursue his <em>Lebensraum </em>plans to create a "living space" for the German people. Before 1939, Jews in Germany faced discrimination and harassment. It was not until the outbreak of war however, that the <em>Final Solution </em>for the eradication of Jews was enacted.

6 0
2 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Other questions:
  • What caused Daniel Shays to sell off half of his land after the American Revolution?
    8·2 answers
  • If Hindu troops won a major battle against their enemies, whom would they praise for his guidance?
    14·2 answers
  • Who can be a U.S. citizen? What are the requirements to be a citizen at birth? What are the steps for a
    12·1 answer
  • What are the three governments mentioned in the proclamation of 1763?
    5·1 answer
  • What happened to Alsace-Lorraine after World War 1
    10·1 answer
  • (Need help fast )<br> Why do states need their own court systems?
    14·2 answers
  • since the constitution did not provide a means for the purchase of the land the acquisition of the territory had made by singing
    13·1 answer
  • What happened to consumer spending?
    10·2 answers
  • in the late nineteenth century, americans initially viewed new immigrants from southern and eastern europe as
    6·1 answer
  • Planters felt cotton would be a profitable "cash crop" for all of the following reasons, EXCEPT which? It was easy to grow. It w
    11·1 answer
Add answer
Login
Not registered? Fast signup
Signup
Login Signup
Ask question!