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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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Research Paper Doctorate
Jon Meacham\'s Book, American Gospel:
Jon Meacham's book, American Gospel: God, the Founding Fathers, and the Making of a Nation, is certainly a book about religion. However, it is even more so about the early history of the United States.
Research Paper Doctorate
Anne Moody: life and activism in the civil rights movement
In the book Coming of Age in Mississippi Anne Moody shares the story of her life. The book is focused on her position as a black woman in a world that she considers as being for whites.
Paper Doctorate
Occupying the media: strategies and impacts
¶ … Elite Media Strategies Marginalize the Occupy Movement," Jackie Smith discusses one of the most pertinent and overpowering movements of today's generation. The Occupy Wall Street movement has taken not just New…
Paper Undergraduate
Minority Overrepresentation in Special Education: Causes and Solutions
Overrepresentation of Minorities Special Education
Research Paper Doctorate
Poverty and Race in America
As a country, we like to believe that we deal well with the issue of poverty and that race is rarely a significant issue in today's society. The statistics, however, suggest something else.
Research Paper Masters
1880-1900\'S Social and Cultural Change Traditional Values and Bourgeois Ideals of Modernity
Social and cultural changes are important determinants of any society. Philosophers have put extensive amount of time and energy in examining how the social and cultural changes have occurred from one time to another. Gordon Wood, Robert Wood, and Modris Eksteins have considerably depicted in their books that war has acted as an important catalyst for social and cultural change in the society. Their viewpoints are similar but contradictory at the same time.
Research Paper Doctorate
Colin Powell- Should He Run
Colin Powell should run for presidency? This is a question that can be best answered by looking at the achievements and flaws of Powell's during his term as the military chief as well as the Secretary of States.
Research Paper Doctorate
1968: Tumult, Turmoil, and Tears
The Detroit Tigers won the World Series in 1968, an event that did much to raise morale (at least, temporarily) in Detroit. Detroiters were still depressed following a week of terrible riots in 1967 and the…
Research Paper Doctorate
The state versus the individual in twentieth-century United States history
American individualism' is a phrase that is often bandied about in the popular media. However, it is seldom given a coherent historical definition. Rampant individualism is often seen as a societal negative that is…
Research Paper Doctorate
Counter Culture the 1960\'s Refers
The 1960's refers to the years between 1960 and 1969, however over the last two decades, the term, the Sixties, has come to refer to the complex of inter-related cultural and political events that occurred in roughly…