360 likes | 377 Views
This article explores the Constitution's treatment of race and its implications. It discusses specific references such as the slave trade, fugitive slave clause, and 3/5 compromise. It also examines interpretative approaches, landmark cases like Plessy v. Ferguson, civil rights movements, and affirmative action.
E N D
The Constitution and Race • Specific references: • No changes to slave trade until 1808 • Fugitive slave clause • 3/5 compromise • No protection for slaves • No protection against individual discrimination • Bill of Rights not applicable to the states until 14th Amendment
The Constitution and Race • Missouri Compromise 1820 • Dred Scott case, 1857 • How to interpret the Constitution? • Founder’s Intent (Originalism) • Textualism • Doctrinalism (precedent) • Lincoln on Dred Scott decision
The Constitution and Race • 14th Amendment • Plessy v. Ferguson • Legal, not social, equality • “Rationality” test • Harlan’s dissent • “Separate but equal” • After Plessy – “Jim Crow” laws
Share Crop System • 90% 1900 • Peonage • 85% 1910 • Land ownership
Attitudes on Race • Cartoons • “White Man’s Burden” • Birth of a Nation • Lynching
The Birth of a Nation 1915 • D.W. Griffith • James S. Pike The Prostrate State 1874 • Birth of a Race
Ida B. Wells • Memphis school teacher • Southern Horrors 1892 • NAACP anti-lynching campaign • No federal anti-lynching law
Booker T. Washington • Up From Slavery • Atlanta Exposition of 1895 • Accomodationist • Tuskegee Institute
W.E.B. Du Bois • The Souls of Black Folk, 1903 • Talented tenth • NAACP
Marcus Garvey • United Negro Improvement Association • The Negro World • Blackstar Steamship Line
Background, WWI-World War II • Agitation for change, pre-World War II • Scientists • NAACP • anti-lynching • Eleanor Roosevelt • World War II, changes • Fighting Hitler • Black soldiers • An American Dilemma
Background, post-World War II • Jackie Robinson & Ralph Bunche
Brown v. Topeka Board of Education, 1954 • NAACP Legal Defense Fund • Thurgood Marshall • Gaines v. Canada (1938) • Sweatt v. Painter (1950) • Brown v. Topeka (1954) • Briggs v. Elliott • Earl Warren • “Compelling State Interest” • Brown II
Early Civil Rights Movement • Rosa Parks • Montgomery Bus Boycott, 1955 • Martin Luther King, Jr.
Early Civil Rights Movement • Greensboro and the Sit-ins
The 1960s, Kennedy and King • The Sit-ins: CORE, SNCC, SCLC • Kennedy and Civil Rights • The Freedom Rides
The 1960s, Kennedy and King • 1963, The March on Washington
LBJ and the Great Society • 1964 Civil Rights Act • Strengthened voting rights • Banned discrimination in public facilities • No federal funds to segregated schools • Created EEOC • Women
LBJ and the Great Society • Freedom Summer, Mississippi
LBJ and the Great Society • Selma and voting rights • 1965 Voting Rights Act • Abolished literacy tests and discrimination at the polls
After the Voting Rights Act • Urban blacks and Malcolm X • “Operation Drop in the Bucket” • Urban violence • Kerner Commission
After the Voting Rights Act • MLK assassinated • Nixon, forced busing, affirmative action
Affirmative Action • Regents of the University of CA v. Bakke (1978) • Grutter v. Bollinger (2003) • Gratz v. Bollinger