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Two Watershed Books 1995

Two Watershed Books 1995. Charles Payne I’ve Got the Light of Freedom: The Organizing Tradition and the Mississippi Freedom Struggle John Dittmer’s Local People: The Struggle for Civil Rights in Mississippi. Charles Payne I’ve Got the Light of Freedom: The Organizing. Quote.

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Two Watershed Books 1995

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  1. Two Watershed Books 1995 Charles Payne I’ve Got the Light of Freedom: The Organizing Tradition and the Mississippi Freedom Struggle John Dittmer’s Local People: The Struggle for Civil Rights in Mississippi Charles Payne I’ve Got the Light of Freedom: The Organizing

  2. Quote • “It means Facing a system that does not lend itself to your needs and devising a means by which you can change that system. But one of the guiding principles that has to be that we cannot lead a struggle that involves masses of people without getting the people to understand what the potentials are, what their strengths are.” Baker

  3. Civil Rights-Black Power Black Freedom Movement Black Freedom Movement

  4. Traditional Civil Rights Narrative • Brown decision • Struggle to overturn Plessy vs. Ferguson 1896 • Charles Hamilton Houston • 1954-1963 • 1954-1965 • 1954-1968 • 1945-1974 • 1945-????

  5. Perspective • Top-down • Focus on legislation • Big events • Community Mobilization • Local people and struggles • Community Organizing • Ella Baker Traditional Revisionist

  6. Critique of Traditional Narrative • Omits the watershed of World War II and black veterans such as Amzie Moore, Medgar Evers, etc. • Foundations of the movement • The Origins of the Civil Rights Movement by Aldon Morris • Posits that there was not one single movement but various local movement centers (focuses on Birmingham, Tallahassee and Birmingham) • Challenges the top-down approach

  7. Premise • World War II veterans • Ordinary People • Building indigenous leadership • Amzie Moore, Medgar Evers and Charles Henry • Lay the foundations • Younger generation • Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee

  8. Tendency to Overemphasize the Ministerial Overemphasis on ministers Many were dependent on the white power structure Social Control Slow to move Congregations were often ahead of the ministers Social control Tendency to examine the ministers in the national movement as representative of the movement

  9. Regional Bias • Civil Rights Movement in the South • Freedom North by Jeanne Theoharis and Komozi Woodard • Groundwork: Local Black Freedom Movements in America • Examples

  10. What was Black Power???? BLACK POWER The term was disturbing to the mainstream civil rights organizations and leaders because it threatened the dependency on white philanthropic donations

  11. Civil Rights and Black Power • The demand to control their own destiny • Voting rights, civil rights and human rights • Self-respect • Self-defense

  12. Myth of Black Power and the Demise of the Movement • 1964-1965 • Too little too late • Energized the movement and focus on community organizingissues • False premise of netgration

  13. Symbols of Black Power

  14. Origins of Black Panthers in Lowndes County, Alabama

  15. Malcolm X

  16. Waiting ‘Til The Midnight HourBy: Peniel E Joseph

  17. Negroes With Guns Robert F. Williams By, David R. Sparrow

  18. NEGROES WITH GUNS This book is one of the most important documents of the African “American” freedom struggle. “Negroes With Guns”, fascinated Huey P. Newton Became the most important intellectual influences on the Black Panther Party for Self- Defense in Oakland, California. Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) Congress of Racial Equality (C.O.R.E) “Negroes With Guns” was a kind of bible Black militancy for members of the Revolutionary African Movement, the Republic of New Africa, and for many other young race rebels. Helped lay the groundwork for the Black Power movement. Timothy Tyson describes Robert F. Williams as, “One of the most dynamic race rebels of a generation that changed the world”.

  19. Reasons “Violence” Must Be Used! “Negroes with Guns”, raises another unresolved issue: devaluation and degradation of African “American” women by larger society. Important case in Monroe, North Carolina’s attempt to protect black women from racist, sexist attacks. Illustrate dehumanizing ways in which African “American” women were viewed and treated historically. Racist white men were granted impunity to disrespect, exploit, and assault Black women at will, impelled by anger or lust!

  20. An Advocate For Violence? • Advocated self-defense, not violence for it’s own sake. • Wasn’t against passive resistance practiced by • Armed self-defense isn’t the only answer, but a critical component in the broad strategy for liberation. • One difference between Williams and MLK Jr. • Massive civil disobedience is a powerful weapon under civilized conditions. • Not introducing violence, combating it.

  21. False Dichotomy Violence and Nonviolence

  22. Birmingham, Alabama

  23. On to Bogalusa • CORE • Klan terror campaign • Bob Hicks, Police Threats, and Defense • The Bogalusa Chapter was born • Most successful Deacons Chapter

  24. Victory • Alton Crowe shooting, July 8, 1965 • Forced government to enforce civil rights Laws

  25. Post 1965 Movement • Selma • Chicago • New York • Black Power Conferences 1966-1968 • Community Organizing • Kenneth Gibson in Newark, New Jersey • Black and Brown Alliance

  26. Jeanne Theoharis

  27. Black Power • Congress of African People • Black Political Convention in Gary, Indiana • Black Independent Convention in 1976

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