Comparing and Contrasting Racial Conflict in the South and the West
Racial conflict in the South and the West was similar in that the dominant race sought to put pressure on the minority races (whether they were blacks in the South or Hispanics or Asians in the West). The situations were different in the sense that the conflicts included different ethnic and racial groups. Nonetheless, the 19th and 20th centuries were particularly tense times, full of racial conflict in places like Birmingham, Alabama, where Martin Luther King, Jr., was imprisoned and in places like Los Angeles where the Zoot Suit Riots took place. This paper will compare and contrast racial conflict in the South and the West by looking at 1) the King’s arrest in Birmingham and the Civil Rights Movement, 2) the lynching of Hispanics in the West throughout the 19th and early 20th centuries, and 3) the treatment of Asian-Americans in the West during WWI—and show how racism in America has at root the idea that WASPs are superior to all others.
The WASP mentality—the White Anglo-Saxon Protestant worldview that has shaped much of American history was on great display during the era of slavery in the...
Works Cited
Carrigan, William D., and Clive Webb. “The lynching of persons of Mexican origin or descent in the United States, 1848 to 1928.” Journal of Social History 37.2 (2003): 411-438.
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