Middlebury

HIST 0372

Civil Rights & Black Freedom

The Long Struggle for Civil Rights and Black Freedom
The modern civil rights movement is the central focus of this course, but it offers more than a survey of events from Montgomery to Memphis. It explores the pre-World War II roots of the modern black freedom struggle, the complex array of local, regional, and national initiatives in the 1950s and 1960s, the competing strategies for empowerment offered by Martin Luther King Jr., and Malcolm X, and developments since the 1970s, including the rise of Black Lives Matter. This course employs a "race relations" perspective, stressing the linkages among the experiences of African Americans, whites, and other groups. 2. Hrs. lect., 1 hr. disc.
Subject:
History
Department:
History
Division:
Humanities
Requirements Fulfilled:
AMR HIS NOR
Equivalent Courses:
BLST 0372
AMST 0372

Sections in Fall 2014, PE - Session I

Fall 2014

HIST0372A-F14 Lecture (Ralph)
HIST0372Y-F14 Discussion (Ralph)
HIST0372Z-F14 Discussion (Ralph)