Share PowerPoint. Anywhere!

civil rights

Uploaded from authorPOINT Lite
Download as Download Not Available PPT
Presentation Description

No description available

Views: 220
Like it  ( Likes) Dislike it  ( Dislikes)
Added: December 28, 2007 This presentation is Public
Presentation Category :Entertainment
Tags Add Tags
Presentation StatisticsNew!
Views on authorSTREAM: 218 | Views from Embeds: 2
- 1 views

Others - 1 views
Presentation Transcript

Slide1 : Social movements occur when everyday people act collectively at the right historical moment Last updated Nov-29-07


Slide2 : The Southern Freedom Movement as a case study of how social movements happen


Slide3 : 1960 Sit Ins 1955 Montgomery bus boycott 1965 Selma 1964 COFO Freedom Summer 1961 Freedom Rides Some of the MAJOR EVENTS OF THE SOUTHERN FREEDOM MOVEMENT 1954 Brown v Board AND Freedom from Fear and Freedom of Association But not Freedom from poverty and discrimination


Slide4 : World War II -----Cold War-------- LYNCHING Plessy 1896 Gandhi - Indian Independence 1963 Kennedy shot Events Occurred In the Context Of Larger Historical Forces African anti-colonial movements 1955 - Bandung, Indonesia The Great Depression Korean War


Slide5 : Waco, Texas---1916 "This is the barbeque we had last night. My picture is to the left with a cross over it. Your son, Joe.”


Slide6 : 14 year old boy and his 35 year old mother Picture taken for postcard reproduction 50 people on bridge, posing for several hours. The photographer had to row out into the middle of the river and upstream enough to get everyone in the picture. Oklahoma, 1911


Slide7 : World War II -----Cold War-------- 1960 Sit Ins 1955 Montgomery bus boycott King 1957 SCLC SNCC 1911 NAACP 1942 CORE 1965 Selma 1964 COFO Freedom Summer 1908 Springfield IL Race riots Panic of 1907 Plessy 1896 Gandhi 1961 Freedom Rides 1954 Brown v Board NAACP local chapters in S. est by black WW II vets CIVIL RIGHTS ACTS 1957 1960 1964 1965 1963 Kennedy shot 1955 Bandung Conference African anti-colonial movements LYNCHING


Slide8 : ORGANIZATIONS: Build Infrastructure and Coalitions Develop experienced activists 1910 --- NAACP National Association for the Advancement of Colored People 1942 --- CORE Congress of Racial Equality 1957--- SCLC Southern Christian Leadership Conference 1960 --- SNCC (snick) Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee 1964 --- COFO Council of Federated Organizations = NAACP, CORE, SCLC, SNCC


Slide9 : World War II -----Cold War-------- 1911 NAACP 1964 COFO Freedom Summer MFDP 1908 Springfield ILL Race riots Panic of 1907 Plessy 1896 Gandhi IN SOUTH: local chapters and youth chapters 1963 Kennedy shot Bandung Conference African anti-colonial movements National Association for the Advancement of Colored People 1954 Brown v Board 1944 Smith v Allwright 1946 Morgan v Virginia 1917 Silent March 1915 Protests against Birth of a Nation LYNCHING


Slide11 : World War II -----Cold War-------- 1942 CORE Lynching Plessy 1896 Gandhi 1961 Freedom Rides 1963 Kennedy shot African anti-colonial movements Congress of Racial Equality 1947 Journey of Reconciliation


Slide13 : World War II -----Cold War-------- 1955 Montgomery bus boycott King 1957 SCLC Lynching highpoint 1898 Plessy 1896 Gandhi Citizenship schools 1963 Kennedy shot African anti-colonial movements Southern Christian Leadership Council 1965 Selma 1964 COFO Freedom Summer Freedom Schools


Slide14 : Jo Ann Robinson, becomes president of Montgomery Women’s Political Council (est.1946 by Mary Fair Burks) in 1950. Claudette Colvin, 15 yrs old Arrested for not giving up her bus seat to a white person ---- 9 months before Rosa Parks Susie McDonald Mary Louise Smith Aurelia Browder Claudette Colvin were the plaintiffs in NAACP filed case: Browder v Gayle ED Nixon local NAACP president, local Pullman Porters union leader, member of Montgomery Welfare League and Montgomery Voters League. Robinson calls for boycott after Parks arrested. WPC and NAACP call upon King to lead new organization-- Montgomery Improvement Association--to organize and sustain boycott


Slide15 : -----Cold War-------- 1960 Sit Ins SNCC Lynching highpoint 1898 Plessy 1896 1963 Kennedy shot African anti-colonial movements 1965 Selma Student Nonviolent Co-ordinating Committee World War II Gandhi


Slide16 : 1960s --- Nashville and Greensboro Nonviolent Sit-Ins Ella Baker and King invite students to Baker’s alma mater -- Shaw University to create SNCC Bob Moses goes to Mississippi in 1961 as SNCC organizer Becomes co-chair of COFO in 1964, organizes MFDP After 1965, SNCC begins to organize around the concept of black power in Lowndes County, Alabama


Slide17 : Nashville Sit-Ins 1960 -- the DISCIPLINE of NVR Strategy: end segregation in all public places downtown -- dramatize issue and win over opposition. Can’t defeat segregation by violence (whites have monopoly over the use of force). Activists a tiny number so need sympathy of the white majority and the active support black middle class. Research: Find an issue that black women cared about -- Lunch Counters THEORY: Tactics: Research: Anticipate opposition tactics to sit in at lunch counters Escalate conflict: Mass arrests of “nice college kids” provokes outrage among black community -- they are ready to boycott downtown stores Seize the issue they give you: Bombing of black lawyer’s home creates opening to meet with mayor - agreement reached to desegregate public facilities. • September 1959, Lawson holds workshops once a week, few attend! • First Nashville sit-in, April 1960, 25 students • Second sit-in, 600 students Recruitment and Training: Goal: Human dignity and Freedom


Slide18 : World War II -----Cold War-------- 1942 CORE Lynching highpoint 1898 Plessy 1896 Gandhi 1961 Freedom Rides 1963 Kennedy shot African anti-colonial movements Interaction of CORE and SNCC


Slide19 : World War II -----Cold War-------- 1911 NAACP 1942 CORE Lynching highpoint 1898 Plessy 1896 Gandhi 1961 Freedom Rides 1946 Morgan v VA 1963 Kennedy shot African anti-colonial movements Interaction of NAACP and CORE


Slide20 : World War II -----Cold War-------- 1955 Montgomery bus boycott King 1957 SCLC Lynching highpoint 1898 Plessy 1896 Gandhi 1932 - ------------------------------------------------------------------ Highlander Citizenship schools 1963 Kennedy shot 1911 NAACP Rosa Parks African anti-colonial movements Interaction of SCLC and NAACP 1965 Selma E.D. Nixon


Slide21 : World War II -----Cold War-------- Lynching highpoint 1898 Plessy 1896 1963 Kennedy shot African anti-colonial movements Interaction of SNCC with NAACP, CORE, SCLC Youth chapters NAACP local chapters in South Established by black WW II vets 1965 Selma 1961 Freedom Rides


Slide22 : World War II -----Cold War--------------------- 1960 Sit Ins 1955 Montgomery bus boycott King 1957 SCLC SNCC 1911 NAACP 1942 CORE 1965 Selma 1964 COFO Freedom Summer 1908 Springfield ILL Race riots Lynching highpoint 1898 Plessy 1896 Gandhi 1961 Freedom Rides 1954 Brown v Board NAACP local chapters in S. est by black WW II vets CIVIL RIGHTS ACTS 1957 1960 1964 1965 1946 Morgan v VA 1932 - ------------------------------------------------------- Highlander Citizenship schools • Community centers • MFDP • Freedom Schools 1963 Kennedy shot African anti-colonial movements


Slide25 : Fannie Lou Hamer speaking at the National Democratic Presidential Nominating Convention


Slide26 : ----------------------Local independent civil rights organizations---------------------- e.g., Women’s Political Council e.g., Montgomery Improvement Association e.g., Alabama Christian Movement for Human Rights 1957 SCLC Churches 1960 SNCC College Campuses Friends of SNCC 1910 NAACP NAACP local chapters Youth chapters The Importance of Infrastructure 1932 - -------------------Highlander--------------------------------------------- 1942 CORE Local chapters A Philip Randolph and Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters 1925---------------------------------------------1950 1908 Federal Council of Churches-------------1950 National Council of Churches


Slide27 : Social movements occur when everyday people act collectively at the right moment in history What to do in-between social movements? Study the Southern Freedom Movement as a case study of how social movements happen Build infrastructures/organizations Create coalitions and community Study and understand tactics, strategy and issues Develop a repertoire of organizing skills Write songs, poetry and plays