Chapter 1: Social changes in the USA from the end of the 1850’s to the 1970’s Chapter based on the Afro-American question Amorce : Source : US Census 1850 Brainstorming on composition and the evolution of the American population: The American population has evolved from 1850’s to the 1970’s: - Evolution of the status in the population : They were slaves in 1850 which there is not at all nowadays - Distinction between people isn’t only based anymore on the segregation Black and White. - Blacks are the second minority by importance of people today whereas it was the most important and the only one considered by the census in 1850 (the Native Americans aren’t integrated in the free colored people). - Black population consideration changed all over the century and twenty years from 1850 to 1970’s. Problematic: Which were the internal transformations of the American society? Which were the fights and the opposition born during that period? 1 I. Segregation, a strong system, from slavery to the 1950’s: A. The Civil War era Source 1: Slaves’ life in plantations based on Django Unchained Sequence 1: Mississippi Slave Market Sequence 2: Mandingo fight Sequence 3: D’Artagnan Death Source: Quentin Tarantino, Django Unchained, 2013. Source 2: The situation of Blacks in the USA in the 1850’s During the period of slavery, free blacks made up about one-tenth of the entire African American population. In 1860, there were almost 500,000 free African Americans – half in the South and half in the North. The free black population originated with former indentured servants and their descendants. It was augmented by free black immigrants from the West Indies and by blacks freed by individual slave owners. But free blacks were only technically free. In the South, where they posed a threat to the institution of slavery, they suffered both in law and by custom many of the restrictions imposed on slaves. In the North, free blacks were discriminated against in such rights as voting, property ownership, and freedom of movement, though they had some access to education and could organize. Free blacks also faced the danger of being kidnapped and enslaved. The earliest African American leaders emerged among the free blacks of the North, particularly those of Philadelphia, Boston, and New York City. Free African Americans in the North established their own institutions – churches, schools, and mutual aid societies. […] Free blacks were among the first abolitionists. […] Beginning in 1830, African American leaders began meeting regularly in national and state conventions. But they differed on the best strategies to use in the struggle against slavery and discrimination. Some, such as David Walker and Henry Highland Garnet, called on the slaves to revolt and overthrow their masters. Others, such as Russwurm and Paul Cuffe, proposed that a major modern black country be established in Africa. […] However, most black leaders then and later regarded themselves as Americans and felt that the problems of their people could be solved only by a continuing struggle at home. […] As a result of the Union victory in the Civil War and the ratification of the Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution (1865), nearly four million slaves were freed. The Fourteenth Amendment (1868) granted African Americans citizenship, and the Fifteenth Amendment (1870) guaranteed their right to vote. Source: "African Americans." Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica Ultimate Reference Suite. Chicago: Encyclopædia Britannica, 2011. Source 3: Compromise among slavery from 1820 to 1854: 2 Source: Encyclopedia Britannica, 2011. Source 4: Republican national program adopted at Chicago in 1860: Resolved, That we, the delegated representatives of the Republican electors of the United States, […] unite in the following declarations: […] 2. That the maintenance of the principles promulgated in the Declaration of Independence and embodied in the Federal Constitution, "That all men are created equal; that they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights; that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness; that to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed," is essential to the preservation of our Republican institutions; and that the Federal Constitution, the Rights of the States, and the Union of the States, must and shall be preserved. 3. That to the Union of the States this nation owes its unprecedented increase in population, its surprising development of material resources, its rapid augmentation of wealth, its happiness at home and its honour abroad; and we hold in abhorrence all schemes for Disunion, come from whatever source they may: And we congratulate the country that no Republican member of Congress has uttered or countenanced the threats of Disunion […] and we denounce those threats of Disunion […]. […] 8. That the normal condition of all the territory of the United States is that of freedom; That as our Republican fathers, when they had abolished Slavery in all our national territory, ordained that "no person should be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law," it becomes our duty, by legislation […] to maintain this provision of the Constitution against all attempts to violate it; and we deny the authority of Congress, of a territorial legislature, or of any individuals, to give legal existence to Slavery in any Territory of the United States. 9. That we brand the recent re-opening of the African slave-trade, under the cover of our national flag, aided by perversions of judicial power, as a crime against humanity and a burning shame to our country and age; and we call upon Congress to take prompt and efficient measures for the total and final suppression of that execrable traffic. […] 12. That, while providing revenue for the support of the General Government by duties upon imports, sound policy requires such an adjustment of these imposts as to encourage the development of the industrial interest of the whole country; and we commend that policy of national exchanges which secures to the working men liberal wages, to agriculture remunerative prices, to mechanics and 3 manufactures an adequate reward for their skill, labour, and enterprise, and to the nation commercial prosperity and independence. […] 16. That a Railroad to the Pacific Ocean is imperatively demanded by the interest of the whole country; that the Federal Government ought to render immediate and efficient aid in its construction; and that, as preliminary thereto, a daily Overland Mail should be promptly established. Source 5: Glory, Film from Matthew Broderick, 1989 (sequences) Sequence 1: Meeting with Frederick Douglas Sequence 2: Formation of the 54th Sequence 3: Despise on Black soldiers Sequence 4: Take no pay Source: Glory, 1989. Questions: 1. Which was the situation of the USA in 1850? The situation in the USA in 1850 was far from problem free. Indeed, the Union of the States was in trouble because of the question of slavery. There were compromises between the South states on the one hand and the North and West states on the other hand in order to create a limit between the states authorized to have slaves and those who weren’t; all this without having the slave states outnumbered the non-slave states. This was a critical situation, close to Disunion even if the Republican Party was against that. The USA were also developing quickly, economically speaking and the slaves allow the south to produce a lot without grieving the benefits by paying the labour force. 2. Which was the situation of African Americans in that period in the North and in the South)? The situation of the African American was hard at that time, even in the North. In the South, they were submitted to slavery and only one tenth of them were free. As slaves, they were sold on market. The family were disrupted and wedding between slaves weren’t recognised as legal by their masters who could sell separately husband, wife and children. As the importation of slaves from foreign countries has been prohibited since 1808, Southern planters also bred slaves to sell them afterwards. The conditions of living were awful: lack of food, poor housing, no real money to expect buying his freedom, no privacy, and physical punishments. For the free black men in the South, the situation wasn’t easier. They were deprived from rights (they didn’t have the right to vote, they weren’t considered real citizen). They risked their lives and could be kidnapped to become slaves again. They had difficulties to find a job because they weren’t considered as people who couldn’t be trusted or different as animals. In the North, the situation is hard too. Even if the black men were free they had to face discrimination against such rights as voting, property ownership and freedom of movement. However, they had some access to education and could organize. They had the same risks as the free black men in the south, the ones to be kidnapped and enslaved. Among those free black men from the North appeared the 1st abolitionist as Frederick Douglas, a former slave, who created the North Star, a very famous and important African American journal. 3. How did the African Americans act during the Civil War (December 20th 1861-June 2nd, 1865)? During the Civil war, in the South, the African American had no choices but continuing working to their master but those who succeeded to go to the North could fight for their freedom in some regiment of North troops. Some of them fought a lot even if they weren’t very well accepted by the other soldiers and by the general staffs who despised them, who didn’t consider them as capable to fight and to be responsible for their freedom. Some of the members of the North troops had pretty much the same idea as the members of the south troops. Black regiments were discriminated. 4. What did the African American obtained at the end of the war? Three amendments to the American constitutions were ratified few years after the Victory of the Union in the Civil War: - The thirteenth amendment in 1865 that freed 4 millions of slaves. - The fourteenth amendment in 1868 granted the African American citizenships - The Fifteenth amendment in 1870 guaranteed their right to vote. 4 But those new provisions of the constitution were merely ignored especially in the South and the desire of reconstruction and of avoiding a new confrontation with the South didn’t make the North pushed to the implementation of those new amendments. B. Theoretical rights but a persistent segregation (CM) After the Civil War, the freedmen were thrown largely on their own meagre resources. Landless and uprooted, they moved about in search of work. They generally lacked adequate food, clothing, and shelter. The Southern states enacted black codes, laws resembling the slave codes that restricted the movement of the former slaves in an effort to force them to work as plantation labourers – often for their former masters – at absurdly low wages. The federal Freedmen's Bureau, established by Congress in 1865, assisted the former slaves by giving them food and finding jobs and homes for them. The bureau established hospitals and schools, including such institutions of higher learning as Fisk University and Hampton Institute. Northern philanthropic agencies, such as the American Missionary Association, also aided the freedmen. During Reconstruction, African Americans wielded political power in the South for the first time. Their leaders were largely clergymen, lawyers, and teachers who had been educated in the North and abroad. But black political power was short-lived. Northern politicians grew increasingly conciliatory to the white South, so that by 1872 virtually all leaders of the Confederacy had been pardoned and were again able to vote and hold office. By means of economic pressure and the terrorist activities of violent antiblack groups, such as the Ku Klux Klan, most African Americans were kept away from the polls. By 1877, when Pres. Rutherford B. Hayes withdrew the last federal troops from the South, Southern whites were again in full control. African Americans were disfranchised by the provisions of new state constitutions such as those adopted by Mississippi in 1890 and by South Carolina and Louisiana in 1895. The rebirth of white supremacy in the South was accompanied by the growth of enforced “racial” separation. Starting with Tennessee in 1870, all the Southern states reenacted laws prohibiting marriage between blacks and whites. They also passed Jim Crow laws segregating blacks and whites in almost all public places. By 1885 most Southern states had officially segregated their public schools. Moreover, in 1896, in upholding a Louisiana law that required the segregation of passengers on railroad cars, the U.S. Supreme Court in the case of Plessy v. Ferguson established the doctrine of “separate but equal.” In the post-Reconstruction years, African Americans received only a small share of the increasing number of industrial jobs in Southern cities. And relatively few rural African Americans in the South owned their own farms, most remaining poor sharecroppers heavily in debt to white landlords. The largely urban Northern African American population fared little better. The jobs they sought were given to European immigrants. In search of improvement, many African Americans migrated westward. C. From the Great Migration to WWII: cultural emancipation from the North. Source 1: Giving education to the African American […] We must bear in mind that one of the influences of slavery was to impress upon both master and slave the fact that labor with the hand was not dignified, was disgraceful, that labor of this character was something to be escaped, to be gotten rid of just as soon as possible. Hence, it was very natural that the Negro race looked forward to the day of freedom as being that period when it would be delivered from all necessity of laboring with the hand. It was a large proportion of the race, immediately after its freedom, should make the mistake of confusing freedom with license. Under the circumstances, any other race would have acted in the same manner. One of the first and most important lessons, then, to be taught the Negro when he became free was the one that labor with the hand or with the head, so far from being something to be dreaded and shunned, was something that was dignified and something that should be sought, loved, and appreciated. Here began the function of the industrial school for the education of the Negro. […] Source: Booker T. Washington1 and William E. B. Du Bois2, The Negro in the South, chapter 2, 1907, p. 45-46. 1 Booker Taliaferro Washington (April 5th, 1856 – November 14th, 1915) was an American educator, author, orator, and political leader. He was the dominant figure in the African American community in the United States 5 Source 2: The Great migration In U.S. history, the widespread migration of African Americans in the 20th century from rural communities in the South to large cities in the North and West, was called the Great Migration. At the turn of the 20th century, the vast majority of black Americans lived in the Southern states. From 1916 to 1970, during this Great Migration, it is estimated that some six million black Southerners relocated to urban areas in the North and West. […] The urban industries were faced with labour shortages. A huge internal population shift among African Americans addressed these shortfalls, particularly during the World Wars, when defense industries required more unskilled labour. […] The “push” factors for the exodus were poor economic conditions in the South – exacerbated by the limitations of sharecropping, farm failures, and crop damage from the boll weevil3 – as well as ongoing racial oppression in the form of Jim Crow laws4. “Pull” factors included encouraging reports of good wages and living conditions that spread by word of mouth and that appeared in African American newspapers. With advertisements for housing and employment and firsthand stories of newfound success in the North, the Chicago Defender, for example, became one of the leading promoters of the Great Migration. In addition to Chicago, other cities absorbed large numbers of migrants, including Detroit (Michigan), Cleveland (Ohio), and New York City. Seeking better civil and economic opportunities, many blacks were not wholly able to escape racism by migrating to the North, where African Americans were segregated into ghettos and urban life introduced new obstacles. Newly arriving migrants even encountered social challenges from the black establishment in the North, which tended to look down on the “country” manners of the newcomers. Black Population Trends 1890’s 1960’s Southern 90.3% 10% Rural 90% 5% Northern 9.7% 90% Urban 10% 95% Source: US census bureau Source 3: The Harlem Renaissance: The Harlem Renaissance was a phase of a larger New Negro movement that had emerged in the early 20th century and in some ways ushered5 in the civil rights movement of the late 1940s and early 1950s. The social foundations of this movement included the Great Migration of African Americans from rural to urban spaces and from South to North; dramatically rising levels of literacy; the creation of national organizations dedicated to pressing African American civil rights, “uplifting” the race, and opening socioeconomic opportunities; and developing race pride, including pan-African sensibilities and programs. […] The Harlem Renaissance is unusual among literary and artistic movements for its close relationship to civil rights and reform organizations. Crucial to the movement were magazines such as The Crisis, published by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP); Opportunity, published by the National Urban League; […]. Negro World, the newspaper of Marcus Garvey's6 Universal Negro Improvement Association, also played a role, but few of the major authors or artists identified with Garvey's “Back to Africa” movement, even if they contributed to the paper. from 1890 to 1915. Representative of the last generation of black leaders born in slavery, he spoke on behalf of the large majority of blacks who lived in the South but had lost their right to vote. 2 William Edward Burghardt Du Bois (February 23rd, 1868 – August 27th, 1963) was an intellectual leader in the United States as a sociologist, historian, civil rights activist, Pan-Africanist, author, and editor. 3 It’s a disease touching the cotton plants. 4 Any of the laws that enforced racial segregation in the South between the end of the formal Reconstruction period in 1877 and the beginning of a strong civil rights movement in the 1950s. 5 To introduce. 6 Garvey urged African American to go back to Africa and to create a state. It was done in 1922 with the creation of Liberia. 6 The renaissance had many sources in black culture, primarily of the United States and the Caribbean, and manifested itself well beyond Harlem. […] The phenomenon known as the Harlem Renaissance represented the flowering in literature and art of the New Negro movement of the 1920s, with […] writers like the poets Countee Cullen, Langston Hughes, and Claude McKay and the novelists Rudolph Fisher, Zora Neale Hurston, and Jean Toomer. The “New Negro,” […] questioned traditional “white” aesthetic standards […] to cultivate personal self-expression, racial pride, and literary experimentation. […] In Harlem and in others cities in the USA, like Chicago, Jazz musicians developed also their performances in clubs and created a new wave of music in the north. Among them, famous musicians like Duke Ellington, Louis Armstrong took the lead. Source: Encyclopedia Britannica Source 4: African American and the New Deal: The Great Depression of the 1930s worsened the already bleak economic situation of African Americans. They were the first to be laid off from their jobs, and they suffered from an unemployment rate two to three times that of whites. In early public assistance programs African Americans often received substantially less aid than whites, and some charitable organizations even excluded blacks from their soup kitchens. […] In the 1932 presidential race African Americans overwhelmingly supported the successful Democratic candidate, Franklin D. Roosevelt. The Roosevelt administration's accessibility to African American leaders and the New Deal reforms strengthened black support for the Democratic Party. A number of African American leaders, members of a so-called “black cabinet,” were advisers to Roosevelt. Among them were the educator Mary McLeod Bethune […]. African Americans benefited greatly from New Deal programs, though discrimination by local administrators was common. […] The industrial boom that began with the outbreak of World War II in Europe in 1939 ended the Depression. However, unemployed whites were generally the first to be given jobs. […] Although discrimination remained widespread, during the war African Americans secured more jobs at better wages in a greater range of occupations than ever before. During the war, […] a large proportion of African American soldiers overseas were in service units, and combat troops remained segregated. […]. Source: Encyclopedia Britannica Questions: 1. Find the different phase of the evolution of the African Americans’ situation from WWI to the end of WWII. There were three main phases in the evolution of the African Americans’ situation: - WWI caused the first massive migration of the African Americans from South to North. Between 1910 and 1920, an estimated 500,000 African Americans left South. This was also called the Great Migration but it was only its beginnings. - The Harlem Renaissance in the 1920’s was the period of development of an African American specific culture in the Northern cities like New York or Chicago. - In the 1930’s, since 1932 and Roosevelt’s election, the discrimination was prohibited by the federal government even if locally, things could be really different, especially in the South. 2. Which was the evolution of the black population settlement during that period? During that period, until the 1960’s, 90 % of the African American who lived in the South migrated to the North. And the settlement which was mainly rural in the 1900’s became mainly urban with 95 % of the African Americans living in the cities in 1960’s. 3. How did the African Americans’ rights evolve? The African Americans rights evolved differently in the North and in the South. In the South, the discriminative constitutions were still in use so the African Americans were despised, unconsidered and even not considered as real citizen. As for voting, every people had to explain a article of the constitution and most of the time, the Blacks had to explain the most difficult. During the 1929 crisis, 7 they were the first one (in the North and in the South) to be touched by the crisis: unemployment, bankruptcies, homeless people were so numerous among the African Americans. However, despite discrimination, the African American situation improved under Roosevelt’s mandates: they had access to the entire process of aids, they could access low cost houses, some organization helped them to continue their studies and some Roosevelt’s counselors (the black cabinet) were black people. In 1938, he provided a text prohibiting discrimination at work. 4. Were segregation and despise over? Segregation and despise weren’t over because locally, people continue to refuse the rights to the African American, especially in the South were they were segregation in schools, public transports, even the restaurants and charity kitchen. In the North, even if Roosevelt promised to punish those who wouldn’t respect the laws against discrimination, the African American were often in the first line for unemployment and social difficulties. II. The Civil Rights movements and fights for equality : 1950’s-1970’s: A. The Civil Rights movements Source 1: Martin Luther King, Jr., and other civil rights leaders of a municipal bus boycott in Montgomery, Ala., riding an integrated bus, December 1956 by the photographer Bettmann Source 2: Civil rights demonstrator being attacked by police dogs, May 3, 1963, Birmingham, Ala. Photo taken by the photographer Bill Hudson for Associated Press Source 3: Martin Luther King speech, I have a dream (extract), March on Washington D. C., August 1963: [...] One day even the state of Mississippi, a state, sweltering7 with the heat of injustice, sweltering with the heat of oppression, will be transformed into an oasis of freedom and justice. I have a dream 7 Étouffer à cause de la chaleur. 8 that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character. I have a dream today. I have a dream that one day, down in Alabama, with its vicious racists, with its governor having his lips dripping with the words of interposition and nullification, one day, right there in Alabama, little black boys and black girls will be able to join hands with little white boys and white girls as sisters and brothers. I have a dream today. [...] Source 4: Civil rights movement’s achievements In 1960, the sit-in movement […] was launched at Greensboro, North Carolina, when black college students insisted on service at a local segregated lunch counter. Patterning its techniques on the nonviolent methods of Indian leader Mohandas Gandhi, the movement spread across the nation, forcing the desegregation of department stores, supermarkets, libraries, and movie theatres. […] By September it was estimated that more than 70,000 students had participated in the movement, with approximately 3,600 arrested; more than 100 cities in 20 states had been affected. The movement reached its climax in August 1963 with the massive March on Washington, D.C., to protest racial discrimination and demonstrate support for major civil rights legislation that was pending in Congress. […]After President Kennedy's assassination (November 1963), Congress, under the prodding of President Lyndon B. Johnson, in 1964 passed the Civil Rights Act. This was the most far-reaching civil rights bill in the nation's history (indeed, in world history), forbidding discrimination in public accommodations and threatening to withhold federal funds from communities that persisted in maintaining segregated schools. It was followed in 1965 by the passage of the Voting Rights Act, the enforcement of which eradicated the tactics previously used in the South to disenfranchise black voters. This act led to drastic increases in the numbers of black registered voters in the South, with a comparable increase in the numbers of blacks holding elective offices there. Source: Encyclopedia Britannica Questions: 1. Which were the actions made during the civil rights movement? During the Civil Rights movements, a lot of actions were made: - Sit-in to protest against segregation in public places - Inquiry to obtain the desegregation of department stores, supermarkets, libraries, and movie theatres. - Long march as the March on Washington D. C. on August 1963 to protest racial discrimination and demonstrate support for major civil rights legislation that was pending in Congress. All these actions were non-violent and based on Gandhi’s theories. 2. Which were the reactions in the southern states of the USA? The reactions were often violent. The non-violent demonstrators were as in Birmingham (Alabama) in 1963 attacked by police dogs trained for that purpose. In 1963, in Selma (Alabama), Civil rights demonstrators were attacked by the police using tear gas, whips and clubs. Thousands of demonstrators were arrested. Thousands of students were arrested during the sit-in movements in many universities in the Southwest of the USA. The governor of Alabama refused the integration of black students in Alabama state university and the American president should ask for the National Guard to protect these students and to allow them to attend courses in that university. 3. What did the African American obtain from that movement? In 1964, the president Lyndon B. Johnson passed the Civil Right Act which forbade discrimination in voting, public accommodations, and employment and allowed the attorney general of the USA to deny federal funds to local agencies that practiced discrimination. It was followed in 1965 by the passage of the Voting Rights Act, which eradicated all discriminatory qualifying tests for voter registrants and provided the appointment of federal registrars. 9 4. Who was the most important leader of that period? The most important leader of the period was Martin Luther King Junior. He was a clergyman born in Georgia near Atlanta where he began to exert his minister. Then, regarding segregation as a shame for the USA, he decided to participate to the non-violent movement of protection against it. He boycotted buses in Alabama. He led the entire Civil rights movements. He delivered the emblematic speech of the movement in August 1963 after a March on DC. That speech is well known as “I have a dream” speech. After the enactment of the Civil Right Act and the Voting Right Act, he continued to fight for a better equality between Black and White, especially by fighting poverty in the poor city district. He was assassinated by a Ku Klux Klan activist in Memphis (TN), in 1968. B. Urban upheaval8 Source 1: The civil rights movement changed in the late 1960’s: […]Up until 1966 the civil rights movement had united widely disparate elements in the black community along with their white supporters and sympathizers, but in that year signs of radicalism began to appear in the movement as younger blacks became impatient with the rate of change and dissatisfied with purely nonviolent methods of protest. This new militancy split the ranks of the movement's leaders and also alienated some white sympathizers, a process that was accelerated by a wave of rioting in the black ghettos of several major cities in 1965-67. After the assassination of King (April 1968) and further black rioting in the cities, the movement as a cohesive effort disintegrated, with a broad spectrum of leadership advocating different approaches and varying degrees of militancy. In the decades that followed, many civil rights leaders sought to achieve greater direct political power through elective office, and they sought to achieve more substantive economic and educational gains through affirmative-action programs that compensated for past discrimination in job hiring and college admissions. Although the civil rights movement was less militant, it was still persevering. Source: Encyclopedia Britannica Source 2: James Brown’s song, Say it loud – I’m black, I’m proud, 1968 8 A big change that causes a lot of confusion, worry and problems. 10 Uh, with your bad self Say it louder (I got a mouth) (x 2) Look a'here, some people say we got a lot of malice Some say it's a lotta nerve I say we won't quit moving Til we get what we deserve We've been buked and we've been scourned We've been treated bad, talked about As just as sure as you're born But just as sure as it take Two eyes to make a pair, huh Brother, we can't quit until we get our share Chorus (x 3): Say it loud, I'm black and I'm proud I've worked on jobs with my feet and my hands But all the work I did was for the other man And now we demands a chance To do things for ourselves we tired of beating our heads against the wall And working for someone else Ooowee, ou're killing me Alright uh, you're out of sight Alright, so tough, you're tough enough Ooowee uh, you're killing me, oow Sometimes we dance, we sing and we talk You know I do like to do the camel walk Alright now, hu alright, Alright now, ha Chorus (x 2) Chorus (x 4) Now we demand a chance to do things for ourselves We tired of beating our heads against the wall And working for someone else A look a'here, One thing more I got to say right here Now, we're people like the birds and the bees We rather die on our feet, Than keep living on our knees Now we's demands a chance to do things for ourselves We're tired of beating our heads against the wall And working for someone else, hu Now we're our people, too We're like the birds and the bees, But we'd rather die on our feet, Than keep a'living on our knees Chorus (x 3) Uh, alright now, good Lord You know we can do the boog-aloo Now we can say we do the Funky Broadway! Now we can do, hu Chorus (x 5) Oooow, oowee, you're killing me, alright Uh, outa sight, alright you're outa sight Ooowee, oh Lord, Ooowee, you're killing me Ooowee, ooowee, ooowee, ooowee, ow Chorus (x 4) Chorus (x 4) Source 3: Malcolm X’s Black Nationalism, interview from 1968. “My personal political philosophy is black nationalism, which means the black man should control the politics of his own community and control the politicians who are in his own community. My personal economic philosophy is also Black Nationalism, which means the black man should have a hand in controlling the economy of the so-called Negro community. He should be developing the type of knowledge that will enable him to own and operate the businesses, and thereby to create employment for his own people, for his own kind. And the social philosophy is also Black Nationalism, which means that instead of the black man trying to force into the society of the white man, which should eliminate from our own society the ills and the defects and make ourselves likable and sociable among our own kind. […] I’m not dissatisfied with everything. […] The only way the problem can be solved: first, the white man and the black man have to be able to sit down at the same table. The white man has to feel free to speak his mind without hurting the feelings of that Negro. And the so-called Negro has to feel free to speak his mind without hurting the feelings of the white man. They can bring the issue that are under the rug out on the top of the table and take an intelligent approach to get the problem solved. That’s the only way. Source 4: Between violence and international protestation. 11 Black Panther Party national chairman Bobby Seale (left) and defense minister Huey Newton by an anonymous photographer for Associated Press. At The Olympic Games at Mexico city, in 1968, Tommie Smith, the winner of 200 meters race and John Carlos the third, gave the Black power salute to protest against racial segregation. Source 5: Meeting with a black panther, extracts from the film Forest Gump, 1994 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OBMAOSgVp_w Questions: 1. How has the African American Civil Rights movement evolved since the middle of the 1960’s? The African American Civil Rights movement changed of appearance in the late 1960’s. The non violent groups lost a part of their audience in the disappointed youth of poor boroughs in the cities. Some more violent movements were created like the black panthers led by Stockely Carmickael. They were black nationalists and Marxist oriented black African American movement. The black panthers popularized the slogan “Black power” in the late 1960’s, also shown by the symbolic salute to protest against racial discrimination. Other leaders rose as Malcolm X which was in favor of Black Nationalism in the political, social and economic domain. 2. Which were the claims, the objectives of this movement and was it still united? The new claims and objectives of the movement in the late 1960’s were to maximize their civil rights and to develop black pride in their culture, habits and social organization. All these movements refused the Whites control and said that the blacks should control their own politicians, their own economy and to stop to destroy their own kinds by disputes and fights but be united as blacks (Malcolm X’s speech). But all these movement aren’t united and the non violence of Martin Luther King and the violent ways of Black Panthers and Black Nationalism of Malcolm X had difficulties to speak the same voice. Violent actions also made lose credit to the Civil Rights cause among the White sympathizers. 3. Which were the reasons of such a radicalization of a part of the movement? The reasons of such a radicalization of a part of the movement were: - Violence was often familiar to the African Americans living in the inner cities. Those neighborhoods were swept by outbreaks of violence, as riots. - Long standing grievances were coming at their climax: police insensitivity and brutality, inadequate educational and recreational facilities, high unemployment, poor housing, high prices, i. e. economic and social issues. 12 - Development of racial riots where Blacks attacked whites: Watts area of LA in July 1965 and in Newark, N. J. and Detroit, Michigan, in July 1967. 4. How could the Vietnam War be a new reason of division inside the movement? The Vietnam War, in which African American soldiers participated in disproportionately high numbers, tended to divide the black leadership and divert white liberals from the civil rights movement. Some NAACP (the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People) and National Urban League leaders minimized the war's impact on the African American home front. A tougher view – that U.S. participation had become a “racist” intrusion in a nonwhite country's affairs – was shared by other African American leaders, including King. He organized the Poor People's Campaign, a protest march on Washington, D.C., before he was assassinated in Memphis, Tenn., in April 1968.. (James Earl Ray, a white small-time crook, was tried and convicted of the murder.) 13
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