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Civil Rights Movement
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The Civil Rights Movement stands as one of the most transformative episodes in American history, making it a central subject in history, political science, sociology, and literature courses alike. Students are drawn to it because it raises enduring questions about race, equality, power, and justice in American society. The movement's roots in the American South, its challenge to systemic racial inequality, and its lasting legal and cultural consequences give it both historical weight and contemporary relevance. Primary sources, court cases, memoirs, and works of fiction all intersect here, offering multiple entry points for academic analysis.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a notably broad range of approaches. Some take a broad historical survey of the movement, tracing its development across different periods including specific moments like 1968. Others focus on regional case studies, such as the movement in Tuskegee, or examine civil rights themes through literary works like Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird, Anne Moody's Coming of Age in Mississippi, and the oral history collection My Soul is Rested. Several papers extend the conversation beyond African American struggles to examine gay and lesbian rights or racial profiling in the legal system, treating civil rights as a broader framework for social justice.

A strong essay on this topic needs a focused thesis that moves beyond summarizing events and instead argues a specific claim about cause, consequence, or meaning. Evidence drawn from primary sources, legislation, or close reading of literary texts tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating the movement as a single unified event rather than acknowledging its regional variations, internal tensions, and evolving goals over time.

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Paper Doctorate
Anne Moody's Coming of Age in Mississippi and Civil Rights
This essay is an analysis of Anne Moody's book Coming of Age in Mississippi, from 1968. The essay compares Moody's analysis with the writings of historians. The essay talks about how Moody's experiences add to the historiography, which tends to whitewash the situation and focus only on the triumph and joy but not on the real factors that failed to be addressed by the movement.
Essay High School
Supreme Court decisions and their legal impact
The Supreme Court decision in 1954 called Brown v. Board of Education did not immediately create integrated schools and classrooms in America. Segregated schools still existed several years after the Brown decision. But eventually, though it was a struggle, the courts provided ways in which school districts could integrate their schools so black and white children could study and learn together, in equal schools. "Separate but Equal" schools were unfair and discriminatory and had to be changed.
Essay Doctorate
Arguments for and against school prayer in public education
Public School Prayer: Is it Constitutional and Moral?
Paper Doctorate
Civic Values in the U.S. Restoring Democracy
Restoring democracy and civic virtue in the United States will require major reforms that reduce the power of corporations, elites and special interests in the whole political process. Right now, there is a radical disconnect between the political and economic elites and the needs and interests of the ordinary voters. Most people today realize that the country is in its worse crisis since the Great Depression of the 1930s, but government and the political system seem dysfunctional and incapable of dealing with it. Removing the power and control of big money from the political process forever would be the most important step in revitalizing American democracy and making the system more representative and accountable. So would eliminating the Electoral College and electing the president and vice president by a majority of the popular vote. Despite the protests of small states, only this type of reform might actually pressure presidential candidates to campaign more widely for votes instead of concentrating on a few large states, or visiting big cities where the wealthiest donors reside. In addition, the Senate seems particularly dysfunctional and more responsive to the needs of elites and corporate interests than the people. Its use of the filibuster was always an absurdity, especially when the South frequently united in a bloc to prevent blacks from obtaining civil and political rights, and the system today simply maintains a kind of status quo that concentrates all wealth and power at the upper levels of society.
Paper Doctorate
Weather Underground Background- During Almost Every Major
The Weather Underground is a 2002 documentary film based on the American radical organization of the 1960s called "The Weathermen." In 1969 a group of leftist college students were so opposed to the Vietnam War and the lack of cohesive student policies that they decided to radicalize and overthrow the U.S. government. The film explores the way the organizers of the movement were so very passionate about the issue that it consumed their lives. The documentary also looks at "The Weathermen" in the cultural and social context of the Black Panther Movement and the Students for a Democratic Society.
Essay Doctorate
Lessons Learned From the Vietnam War Diplomatic
In terms of the diplomatic relations that the Johnson and Nixon Administrations had with representatives from North Vietnam and from South Vietnam, the two most appropriate words to describe those relations are failure…
Paper Doctorate
Book review of Assata Shakur's autobiography and political ideas
Assata Shakur is an activist who is also a member of the Black Panthers. Addressed here is Shakur's political philosophy and other information contained in her biography. She has been in and out of prison, and escaped in 1979 to live in exile in Cuba. During her lifetime she has been the subject of much debate about her role in the Black Panthers as well as her treatment in prison and other issues.
Paper Doctorate
No Pity and My Body Politic: A Disability Studies Comparison
Both Joseph Shapiro and Simi Linton focus on the prior and current plight of disabled persons, how that plight and fight compares to the racial civil rights movement and how disabled people truly desire to be treated. Both books note that they want to be treated no differently than able-bodied and able-minded people but they want ramps and other minor implements to help them navigate daily tasks and travel.
Research Paper Doctorate
Women of Brewster Place Gloria
Gloria Naylor in her novel the Women of Brewster Place considers aspects of the black experience in American life in the persons of several women who live in a particular neighborhood, a neighborhood that is part of the…
Research Paper Doctorate
African-American History Sharecropping Was Not
Sharecropping was not a direct effort by whites to keep blacks in a submissive position, but rather was a phenomenon that developed after the Civil War as the South tried to rebuild its economy (Riddle 1995).