Create a playlist of 9 songs that relates to major themes from the reading – include a short synopsis describing the connection between each selected song and the readings. It is not req
*Create a playlist of 9 songs that relates to major themes from the reading – include a short synopsis describing the connection between each selected song and the readings. It is not required, but links to a YouTube or a Spotify playlist is appreciated
*THEMES: Civil Rights Movement, Murder of Emmitt Till, Montgomery Bus Boycott, 1965 Voting Rights Act. (change themes if necessary)
*PLEASE LOOK AT PLAYLIST EXAMPLE AND POWERPOINT LINKS
Turner Wegener
Professor Thomas
African American Studies
10/06/2020
Reading Response Module 5: Playlist
1: “The Times They Are A-Changin'” – Bob Dylan: This song has aged very well and delivers a
very simple and true fact, that things are changing. This was especially true for the time the
song was released and became an extremely powerful influence on all cultures to begin to alter
their way of thinking in relation to topics involving equality, and civil rights.
2: “Hurricane” – Bob Dylan: This song tells the true story of an African American Boxer (Ruben
“Hurricane” Carter) who is wrongly accused of murdering a bartender. While he was on trial, he
was found guilty and sentenced to life in prison by an all-white jury. He was eventually released
after about 20 years after retrials that occurred due to the song. The murders and trial took
place in New Jersey and shows that even with the civil rights movement being very powerful
during the time racism still existed everywhere, not just the south.
3: “Keep Your Eyes on the Prize” -Various artists: Being the theme to documentary series I’m
writing about, I would be remised if I didn’t include this as part of the assignment. The song is
very powerful and creates and clear and concise message that the goal of everything the civil
rights movements is working towards is equality and a just democracy inclusive to all citizens of
the United States.
4: “Going Down To Mississippi” – Phil Ochs: This song is reminiscent of the white Americans that
traveled from the northern states to march in support of civil rights. One verse of the song
states “If you never see me again, just know that I had to go”. Several people lost their lives
while in support of this movement and as sad of a fact that is, it was done while standing up for
a greater cause. To me this is something that gives those that lost their lives immortality.
5: “What’s Going On” -Marvin Gaye: I like to think this song would be a great way to help create
understanding in the actions taken by the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee while
they carried out their tasks that challenged segregation.
6: “Get up Stand Up” – Bob Marley and the Wailers: The first verse of this song embodies the
civil rights movement, “Get up stand up, stand up for your right”. The entire song is an
empowering message
7: “Fight the Power” – Public Enemy: This song has a strong relation to the marches Mississippi
and Alabama showing conviction and standing their ground against prejudicial law enforcement
and not letting the movement be stopped because of failed first attempts.
8: “Ohio” – Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young: Although this song refers to an event that occurred
passed the timeframe of the topics covered in this module, it relates to themes of people dying
while standing up for their rights and the federal government having little to no interference to
protect people from these heinous acts.
9: “We Shall Overcome” – Toots and the Maytals: This song relates heavily to the perseverance
and attitude that was carried by civil rights leaders to help push those who developed doubts
that their cause may be for naught. This type of attitude has aided in major progress in the fight
for equality.
Sources:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ohio_(Crosby,_Stills,_Nash_%26_Young_song)
Eyes on the Prize Documentary: Episodes 4-6
,
EYES ON THE PRIZE: AWAKE, FIGHTING
BACK…AND I AIN’T SCARED AFAM B201 – Intro to African American Studies
Najmah Thomas, Ph.D.
Session Agenda
Admin / Reminders
RECAP: The New Deal & Old Dilemmas
Opening Discussion
Lecture: Eyes on The Prize
Examining America’s Civil Rights Movement
Community Organizing
Episode 1 – Awakenings
Next steps / Adjourn
RECAP: The New Deal
Reading:
Week 1a Reading –Eyes on The Prize Study Guide –
Episode 1; Clark Ready From Within
10/13 -14) ☺ ENJOY YOUR FALL BREAK
Learning Module 4 Quiz (due EOD 10/19)
Reading Response Assignment (due EOD 10/23)
RECAP: New Deal & Old Dilemmas
Roosevelt’s New Deal programs in response to the Great Depression (FHA, SSA, WPA, FDIC)
Discrimination in New Deal programs (FHA & red- lining)
Fighting for ‘Double-V’ in WWII
Discrimination in healthcare systems (US Public Health Service and Tuskegee Syphilis Study)
African American Studies: Timeline of selected events (1917 – 1968)
1917-18 – US intervenes in World War I
1919 – 'Red Summer' – over 25 documented urban race riots in Chicago, DC
and other cities
1920 – 19th Amendment (women's right to vote)
1920s – The Harlem Renaissance – NYC, Chicago, Detroit, etc.,
experience similar explosion of creative Black
culture; 1929 – Great Depression begins
1933-38 – NEW DEAL ERA
1937 – Zora Neale Hurston writes best-known novel,
Their Eyes Were Watching God, in seven weeks while studying religion in Haiti.
1939 – 1945 – WWII
1948 – President Harry Truman desegregates the
armed forces.
1948 – Beginning of Apartheid in South Africa
1952 – Briggs v. Elliot (Clarendon County, SC), first Supreme Court case in the US
to challenge segregation; 1954 – Supreme Court
outlaws segregated public schools in Brown v. Board of
Education.
1955 – 14-year-old Emmett Till, an African American youth from Chicago, is brutally murdered for
flirting with a white woman four days earlier. Vietnam
War begins.
1955-57 – Bus boycott in Montgomery, Alabama,
sparked by seamstress Rosa Parks and organized by Rev.
Martin Luther King, Jr.
Civil Rights Act of 1957 – protect voting rights.
1956 – Septima P. Clark fired from teaching job for
refusal to renounce the NAACP as required by SC
1958 – Orangeburg Massacre – 3 students killed,
28 wounded at SCSU
1960 – 4 NC A&T students stage sit-ins at Woolworth’s lunch counter in Greensboro,
North Carolina, sparking other sit-ins across the south; (May) Civil Rights Act of
1960 – protect voting rights.
1962 – James Meredith enrolls at University of
Mississippi after President John F. Kennedy sends in
troops.
1963 – (August) – Over 250,000 attend March on Washington; MLK “I Have a Dream” speech.
(September) Images of violence in Birmingham, Al. (4 girls die in
church bomb, police brutality, etc.) result in widespread sympathy for
the Civil Rights Movement.
1963 – (November 22) President John F. Kennedy
assassinated.
Nation of Islam membership reaches 30,000 (from 500)
under leadership of Malcolm X.
1964 – Students Michael Schwerner, Andrew
Goodman and James Chaney are murdered
during Freedom Summer in Mississippi.
1964 – (July) President Lyndon Johnson signs
sweeping Civil Rights Act, outlawing discrimination.
(October) MLK wins the Nobel Peace Prize.
1965 – (March) MLK leads a protest march from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama, in support of black voter
registration; (August) Voting Rights Act of 1965
– abolish literacy tests.
1965 (February 24) Malcolm X assassinated.
(August) President Johnson signs Voting Rights Act.
1966 – New leader of the Student Nonviolent
Coordinating Committee (SNCC) Stokely Carmichael coins the term 'Black Power"
1968 – (2/8) Orangeburg Massacre – students Samuel Hammond, Henry Smith, and Delano Middleton (still in high
school) killed by police gunfire on the campus of
South Carolina State College.
1968 (April 4) – King assassinated, sparking riots
in more than 100 cities.
1968 – End of the "Great Migration" (over 6 million African Americans left the
south for points north & west)
Opening Discussion
Module Thesis Statement 7
The social, political and economic gains
for African Americans during the Civil
Rights Movement were achieved as a
result of ongoing interaction between the
government, civil rights organizations,
and individual advocates.
Eyes on the Prize
Eyes On The Prize (1987)- helping us analyze the movement through primary sources
Shows the link between education and political organizing – a strategy pioneered by ‘Queen Mother of the Civil Rights’ Septima P. Clark
Describes the high costs of standing up for civil rights
Episode 1 – Awakenings:
No more accepting second-class citizenship…
No more accepting blatant violations of basic rights…
8
Eyes on the Prize – Community
Organizing
The Role of Organizations & Youth/Young People:
ACHR (Alabama Christian Movement for Human Rights)
COFO (Council of Federated Organizations)
CORE (Congress of Racial Equality)
MIA (Montgomery Improvement Association)
SCLC (Southern Christian Leadership Conference)
SNCC (Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee)
WPC (Women’s Political Council)
Image source: F/H
Eyes on the Prize Episode 1 –
Awakenings
Marshall (Justice) in the making:
NAACP legal strategy
Charles Hamilton Houston – the Man Who Killed Jim Crow
Brown v. Board of Education (1954):
First, Briggs v. Elliott in Clarendon, SC (1950, decided 1952)
◼ Clark Doll Study
◼ 2010 CNN Study
Overturns Plessy v. Ferguson and separate but equal doctrine
Segregationists respond with terror and violence
Image source: Cecil Williams
SC Civil Rights Museum
Image source: NY Times
Eyes on the Prize Episode 1 –
Awakenings
The murder of Emmett Till (1955):
A Black Boy from Chicago…in Mississippi
Enforcing segregation, maintaining white supremacy
“The world is going to have to look at this.” – Mrs. Till
Mose Wright stands up
Getting away with murder…and sparking a movement
Eyes on the Prize Episode 1 –
Awakenings
The Montgomery Bus
Boycott (1955 – 1957):
But first, Claudette Colvin
(March 2, 1955)
Rosa Parks…and Septima
P. Clark
Jo Ann Robinson
delivers…50,000 leaflets
A 26-year old shall lead
them…
Winning…in 381 days
Septima P. Clark and Rosa Parks,
1955 (TN) loc.gov
Please be sure to read (& watch if possible) Eyes
on the Prize – Episode 2 before next class session!
Next Session: Tuesday, October 18th
4:30pm
,
EYES ON THE PRIZE
AFAM B201 – Intro to African American Studies
Najmah Thomas, Ph.D.
Agenda
Admin & Module To-do List
Timeline
Eyes on the Prize (EOTP): Episode 1 Recap
Opening Discussion
EOTP Episode 2:
Fighting Back
Enforcing Brown
Separate & Unequal…outside of the South
2
Admin / Module To-Do List
Reading:
Week 1a Reading –Eyes on The Prize Study Guide –
Episode 2
Week 1b Reading – Eyes on The Prize Study Guide –
Episode 3
Learning Module 4 Quiz (due EOD 10/19)
Reading Response Assignment (due EOD 10/23)
AASA club meeting today 6:15pm
African American Studies: Timeline of selected events (1917 – 1968)
1917-18 – US intervenes in World War I
1919 – 'Red Summer' – over 25 documented urban race riots in Chicago, DC
and other cities
1920 – 19th Amendment (women's right to vote)
1920s – The Harlem Renaissance – NYC, Chicago, Detroit, etc.,
experience similar explosion of creative Black
culture; 1929 – Great Depression begins
1933-38 – NEW DEAL ERA
1937 – Zora Neale Hurston writes best-known novel,
Their Eyes Were Watching God, in seven weeks while studying religion in Haiti.
1939 – 1945 – WWII
1948 – President Harry Truman desegregates the
armed forces.
1948 – Beginning of Apartheid in South Africa
1952 – Briggs v. Elliot (Clarendon County, SC), first Supreme Court case in the US
to challenge segregation; 1954 – Supreme Court
outlaws segregated public schools in Brown v. Board of
Education.
1955 – 14-year-old Emmett Till, an African American youth from Chicago, is brutally murdered for
flirting with a white woman four days earlier. Vietnam
War begins.
1955-57 – Bus boycott in Montgomery, Alabama,
sparked by seamstress Rosa Parks and organized by Rev.
Martin Luther King, Jr.
Civil Rights Act of 1957 – protect voting rights.
1956 – Septima P. Clark fired from teaching job for
refusal to renounce the NAACP as required by SC
1958 – Orangeburg Massacre – 3 students killed,
28 wounded at SCSU
1960 – 4 NC A&T students stage sit-ins at Woolworth’s lunch counter in Greensboro,
North Carolina, sparking other sit-ins across the south; (May) Civil Rights Act of
1960 – protect voting rights.
1962 – James Meredith enrolls at University of
Mississippi after President John F. Kennedy sends in
troops.
1963 – (August) – Over 250,000 attend March on Washington; MLK “I Have a Dream” speech.
(September) Images of violence in Birmingham, Al. (4 girls die in
church bomb, police brutality, etc.) result in widespread sympathy for
the Civil Rights Movement.
1963 – (November 22) President John F. Kennedy
assassinated.
Nation of Islam membership reaches 30,000 (from 500)
under leadership of Malcolm X.
1964 – Students Michael Schwerner, Andrew
Goodman and James Chaney are murdered
during Freedom Summer in Mississippi.
1964 – (July) President Lyndon Johnson signs
sweeping Civil Rights Act, outlawing discrimination.
(October) MLK wins the Nobel Peace Prize.
1965 – (March) MLK leads a protest march from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama, in support of black voter
registration; (August) Voting Rights Act of 1965
– abolish literacy tests.
1965 (February 24) Malcolm X assassinated.
(August) President Johnson signs Voting Rights Act.
1966 – New leader of the Student Nonviolent
Coordinating Committee (SNCC) Stokely Carmichael coins the term 'Black Power"
1968 – (2/8) Orangeburg Massacre – students Samuel Hammond, Henry Smith, and Delano Middleton (still in high
school) killed by police gunfire on the campus of
South Carolina State College.
1968 (April 4) – King assassinated, sparking riots
in more than 100 cities.
1968 – End of the "Great Migration" (over 6 million African Americans left the
south for points north & west)
RECAP: EOTP Episode 1– Awakenings
Brown v. Board of Education
“To separate [black children] from others of similar age and qualifications solely
because of their race generates a feeling of
inferiority as to their status in the community that may
affect their hearts and minds in a way unlikely ever to be
undone.”
-Chief Justice Warren (unanimous opinion of the SCOTUS)
RECAP: EOTP Episode 1– Awakenings
Brown v. Board of Education (May 17, 1954)
Overturns separate but equal doctrine, sets the stage for direct action
The murder of Emmett Till (August 28, 1955)
Galvanizes the attention of a broader audience
The Montgomery Bus Boycott (December 1955- December 1956)
Propels a moment and a young leader into a movement
Image source: Cecil
Williams SC Civil
Rights Museum
Opening Discussion
EOTP Episode 2 – Fighting Back
a legal or political process of ending laws, policies and practices that require the separation and isolation of different racial and ethnic groups
a social process in which members of different racial and ethnic groups experience fair and equal treatment, within desegregated environments
Desegregation Integration
EOTP Episode 2 – Fighting Back
The African American community rejects “separate but equal” education:
1956, Autherine Lucy enrolled in the all- white University of Alabama
1957, Little Rock Nine (Central High School, AK)
1958, Orangeburg Massacre (SCSU, SC)
Segregationists respond with ‘massive resistance’:
Elected officials respond with defiance, tacit approval for mob-like atmosphere
White Citizens Councils
Criminalizing protestors, evicting sharecroppers, voting to defund and/or close schools
Terror, bombings
EOTP Episode 2 – Enforcing Brown
Enforcing Brown v. Board of Education decision:
First-person accounts from Little Rock 9, James Meredith, other students
Why were schools the ‘touch point’ for desegregation?
What is the difference between integration and desegregation??
Separate & unequal…outside of the
South
“When we would go to white schools, we’d see these lovely classrooms, with a small number of children in each class…the teachers were permanent. We’d see
wonderful materials. When we’d go to our schools, we would see overcrowded classrooms, children sitting out in the corridors, and so forth. And so, then we decided
that where there were a large number of white students, that’s where the care went. That’s where the
books went. That’s where the money went.”
-Ruth Batson; Boston, MA mother of 3, civil-rights activist
Separate & unequal…outside of the
South
White backlash, opposition to school integration
Segregation by law vs segregation by ‘racial imbalance’
Examples of organized resistance to school desegregation in NY (1957), Detroit (1960), Boston (1960s onward)
“White parents and politicians framed their resistance to school desegregation in terms like “busing” and “neighborhood schools,” and this rhetorical shift allowed them to support white schools and neighborhoods without using explicitly racist language.” –EOTP, ep2
The Soiling
of Old
Glory,
by Stanley
Forman in
Boston
Please be sure to read Eyes on the Prize – Episode
3 before class the next session!
Next Session: Thursday, October
19th – 4:30pm
Group Discussion
1. Is segregation and “racial imbalance” the same thing? Do they have the same outcomes?
2. What can we do to mitigate the negative impacts of “racial imbalance” in our society??
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