Ch 25 Chapter Study Outline
Chapter 25 Study Outline
- The freedom movement—civil rights
- Rising tide of protest
- Sit-in campaigns
- Origins at Greensboro
- Spread across South
- Founding of Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC)
- Freedom Rides
- Congress of Racial Equality (CORE)
- Purpose
- Experience
- Outcome: Desegregation of interstate bus travel
- Birmingham desegregation campaign
- Climax of region-wide demonstrations
- Leadership of Martin Luther King, Jr.
- Letter from Birmingham Jail
- Deployment of black school children
- Brutal response of "Bull" Connor; widespread revulsion over
- Impact on public opinion
- Growing sympathy for civil rights
- Presidential endorsement of movement
- Outcome: Adoption of desegregation plan
- Themes and characteristics
- Growing involvement of college students, youth
- Vision of empowerment of ordinary blacks
- Commitment to nonviolent resistance
- Multiplicity of organizations, settings, and strategies
- Escalation of violent response
- Perpetrators
- Ordinary citizens
- Local and state officials
- Targets, episodes
- Firebombing, beatings of Freedom Riders
- Mob violence against desegregation of University of Mississippi
- Use of fire hoses, dogs, beatings against Birmingham protesters
- Assassination of Medgar Evers
- Deadly bombing of Birmingham church
- The march on Washington
- Magnitude
- As peak of nonviolent civil rights coalition
- Breadth of demands
- King's "I Have a Dream" speech
- Glimpses of movement's limitations and fault lines
- All-male roster of speakers
- Toning down of John Lewis's speech
- The Kennedy years
- John F. Kennedy (JFK)
- Image of glamour, dynamism
- Inaugural themes
- "new generation"
- "pay any price"
- "do for your country"
- Kennedy and the world
- New Cold War initiatives
- Peace Corps
- Space race; call for moon landing
- Alliance for Progress
- Bay of Pigs fiasco
- Berlin crisis; construction of Berlin Wall
- Cuban missile crisis
- Narrative
- Discovery of Soviet missiles in Cuba
- U.S. "quarantine" of Cuba
- Soviet withdrawal of missiles
- Significance and aftermath
- Imminence of nuclear war
- Sobering effect on JFK; American University speech
- Nuclear test ban treaty
- Kennedy and civil rights
- Initial disengagement
- Growing support
- Assassination of JFK
- Shock to nation
- Succession of Lyndon B. Johnson (LBJ) to presidency
- Lyndon Johnson's presidency
- LBJ
- Personal background
- New Deal outlook
- Civil rights under LBJ
- The Civil Rights Act of 1964
- Support from LBJ
- Provisions
- : Freedom Summer—Voter registration in Mississippi
- Concerted civil rights initiative
- Influx of white college students
- Violent reception
- Bombings, beatings
- Murder of three activists
- Widespread revulsion over
- Mississippi Freedom Democratic party
- Crusade for representation at Democratic convention
- Fannie Lou Hamer
- Bitterness over Democrats' response
- Voting Rights Act
- Background
- Selma-to-Montgomery march
- LBJ address to Congress
- Provisions
- Twenty-Fourth Amendment
- Immigration reform: Hart-Cellar Act
- Links to civil rights reform
- Provisions
- Long-term consequences
- The 1964 election
- Right-wing views of Republican Barry Goldwater
- The conservative sixties
- Young Americans for Freedom
- Sharon Statement
- Ideas
- Prominence in Barry Goldwater's 1964 campaign
- New conservative constituencies
- Expanding suburbs of southern California, Southwest
- Sun Belt entrepreneurs
- Deep South whites
- Racial overtones of conservative appeal
- LBJ's landslide reelection victory
- Seeds of conservative resurgence
- Immigration reform
- The Great Society
- Goals and philosophies
- Government action to promote general welfare
- Fulfillment and expansion of New Deal agenda
- Eradication of poverty
- Broadening of opportunity
- Lessening of inequality
- New conception of freedom
- Key measures
- Medicaid and Medicare
- Increased funding for education, urban development
- Increased funding for the arts, humanities, public broadcasting
- War on Poverty
- Outlook
- Influence of Michael Harrington's The Other America
- Emphasis on fostering skills, work habits
- De-emphasis on direct aid, structural remedies
- Input of poor into local programs
- Key measures
- Food stamps
- Office of Economic Opportunity initiatives
- Achievements
- Affirmation of social citizenship
- Substantial reduction of poverty
- Limitations
- Inadequate funding
- Long-term persistence of poverty, inequality
- The changing black movement
- Emerging challenges to civil rights movement
- Persistence of racial inequality and injustice, North and South
- Diverging perspectives of whites and blacks on racial issues
- The ghetto uprisings
- Leading episodes: Harlem, Watts, Newark, Detroit
- Kerner Report
- Growing attention to economic issues
- King's "Bill of Rights for the Disadvantaged"
- A. Philip Randolph and Bayard Rustin's Freedom Budget
- King's Chicago Freedom Movement
- Demands
- Mayor Richard J. Daley's political machine
- Ineffectiveness of mass protest tactics
- Radicalization of King
- Malcolm X
- Background
- Black Muslims
- Message
- Black self-determination
- Rejection of integration, nonviolence
- Assassination
- Legacy
- Lack of consistent ideology or coherent movement
- Enduring appeal of call for black self-reliance
- The rise of Black Power
- Introduction by Stokely Carmichael
- Imprecision and multiplicity of meanings
- Resonance among militant youth
- Place in wider spirit of self-assertion; "black is beautiful"
- Militant directions of SNCC, CORE
- Black Panther party
- Emergence
- Demands and programs
- Demise
- Internal divisions
- Assault by government
- Vietnam and the New Left
- Arena: college campuses
- Following: white middle-class youth
- Spirit and ideology
- Departure from Old Left and New Deal liberal models
- Aspects of postwar society brought under challenge
- Personal alienation
- Social and political conformity
- Bureaucratization
- Corporate, Cold War outlook of American institutions
- Material acquisitiveness
- Social and economic inequality
- Gulfs between national values and realities
- Visions and inspirations
- "Authenticity"
- "Participatory democracy"
- Black freedom struggle
- Key moments
- Influential social critiques
- James Baldwin's The Fire Next Time
- Rachel Carson's Silent Spring
- Michael Harrington's The Other America
- Jane Jacobs' The Death and Life of Great American Cities
- The rise of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS)
- Emergence and growth
- Port Huron Statement
- Free Speech Movement at Berkeley
- America and Vietnam
- America's growing involvement (pre-LBJ)
- Outlook of policymakers
- Cold War assumptions
- Ignorance of Vietnamese history, culture
- Fear of "losing" Vietnam
- Key developments
- Defeat of French colonialism
- Fostering of Ngo Dinh Diem regime in South Vietnam
- Dispatch of counterinsurgency "advisers"
- Collapse of Diem regime; U.S.-backed coup
- Lyndon Johnson's war
- LBJ's initial outlook
- Escalation
- Gulf of Tonkin resolution
- Initiation of air strikes
- Introduction of ground troops
- Increasing magnitude of troop presence, bombing
- Brutality
- Bombing
- Chemical defoliation, napalm
- "Search and destroy" missions; "body counts"
- Lack of progress
- Resilience of Viet Cong and North Vietnamese forces
- Failings of South Vietnamese government
- The anti-war movement
- Emerging critiques
- Antiwar movement
- Early stirrings
- SDS rallies
- Themes
- Growth
- Draft resistance
- 1967 Washington rally
- Wider currents of dissent
- Counterculture
- Spread among youth
- College students
- Working class
- Spirit and vision
- Rejection of mainstream values
- Challenge to authority
- Community, creativity, pleasure over pursuit of wealth
- Cultural "liberation"
- "Sexual revolution"
- Symbols and manifestations
- Physical appearance, fashion
- "Sex, drugs, rock and roll"
- Be-Ins
- Timothy Leary; LSD
- "Turn on, tune in, drop out"
- New forms of radical action
- Underground newspapers
- Youth International party ("Yippies")
- Communes
- Rock festivals; Woodstock
- Hair
- Reawakening of feminism
- Status of women at outset of 1960s
- Legal subordination
- Barriers to power, opportunity
- Betty Friedan's The Feminine Mystique
- Steps toward equal rights
- Equal Pay Act
- Civil Rights Act of 1964
- Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
- Founding of National Organization for Women
- Range of demands
- Middle-class character
- "Women's liberation"
- Roots in civil rights and student movements
- Inspiration of movements' ideals
- Indignation against movements' inequalities
- Key initiatives
- Protests within SNCC, SDS
- "Consciousness-raising" groups
- Miss America beauty pageant protest
- Impact on public consciousness
- Expansion of idea of freedom
- Introduction of "sexism," "sexual politics," "the personal is political"
- Campaigns and demands
- Abortion rights; reproductive freedom
- Wide-ranging issues; Sisterhood Is Powerful
- Growing acceptance of feminist ideas
- Rise of gay liberation
- Traditional oppression of gays
- Legal and cultural stigmatization
- Harassment of gay subcultures
- Stonewall revolt
- Emergence of militant movement
- "Out of the closet"
- Gay pride marches
- Latino activism
- Chicano pride movement
- United Farm Workers
- Cesar Chavez
- Blend of civil rights and labor struggles
- Grape strike, boycott
- Young Lords Organization (New York)
- Feminist current
- Red Power—Indian militancy
- Background: shifting Indian policies of postwar administrations
- Demands
- Material aid
- Self-determination
- Initiatives
- Founding of American Indian Movement
- Occupation of Alcatraz; Red Power movement
- Impact
- Silent Spring—New environmentalism
- Themes
- Critique of prevailing notions of progress, social welfare
- Activist, youth-oriented style
- Language of citizen empowerment
- Initiatives
- Rachel Carson's Silent Spring
- Campaign to ban DDT
- Expanding range of causes, organizations
- Progress
- Bipartisan appeal
- Clean Air and Clean Water Acts
- Endangered Species Act
- Inauguration of Earth Day
- Consumer activism
- Ralph Nader
- Unsafe at Any Speed
- Subsequent investigations
- Spread of consumer protection laws, regulations
- The rights revolution and the Supreme Court
- Warren Court
- Reaffirmation of civil liberties
- Curtailing of McCarthyite persecution
- Intertwining of civil liberties and civil rights
- NAACP v. Alabama
- New York Times v. Sullivan
- Loving v. Virginia
- Jones v. Alfred H. Mayer Co.
- Imposition of Bill of Rights protections on states
- Bars on illegal search and seizure, cruel and unusual punishment
- Right of defendant to speedy trial, legal representation
- Miranda v. Arizona
- Political reapportionment: Baker v. Carr
- Reinforcement of separation of church and state
- Establishment of right to privacy
- Griswold v. Connecticut
- Roe v. Wade
- Implications for women's rights
- Source of ongoing controversy
- 1968: A year of turmoil
- Momentous events around nation
- Tet offensive; repercussions at home
- Eugene McCarthy's challenge to LBJ for nomination
- New Hampshire primary
- Withdrawal of LBJ
- Assassination of King; subsequent urban unrest
- Student revolt at Columbia University
- Assassination of Robert F. Kennedy
- Antiwar protests, police riot at Chicago Democratic convention
- The global 1968
- A year of worldwide upheaval
- Anti-war demonstrations in many world capitols
- Worker-student uprising in France
- Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia
- Killing of student protesters at Mexico City Olympics
- Women's rights movement advanced in many countries
- Nixon's comeback
- Stages
- Attainment of Republican nomination
- Narrow election victory over Hubert Humphrey
- Independent campaign of George Wallace
- Sources
- Conservative backlash
- Resonance of appeals to "silent majority," "law and order"
Last modified: Tuesday, March 1, 2011, 8:08 AM