A Book Review of The Struggle
Book Review of The Struggle for Black Equality: 1954 - 1992 The Struggle for Black Equality is an outstanding history of the civil rights movement. The book recounts the growth of the 20th Century Civil Rights Movement from the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education Supreme Court decision, through the Southern segregation of the 1960's, to predominant urban problems of the 1990's. The work covers important aspects of key leadership, founding of civil rights organizations, historic incidents, political adversaries, advocates, resistance defeats, eventual triumph of Civil Rights and subsequent contemporary discrimination. The author explains that the appointment of Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr., to the Southern Christian Leadership Conference fit the need for Southern African Americans to become preeminent in the movement, which before the founding of the SCLC and additional civil rights organizations was chiefly the domain of Northerners (Sitkoff, 56). "Now the Southern churches provided the movement with a stable base,"1 that firmly established non violence at it's core. Sitkoff's analysis of the Civil Rights Era accurately illustrates the social protest of the period with broad clarity, including an authoritative account o . . .
Sitkoff did not use footnotes in this works, however a bibliographical essay is provided. Book Review of The Struggle for Black Equality: 1954 - 1992 The March on Washington symbolized the unification of white and black Americans in The Struggle for Black Equality, 75,000 whites participated in the march, "the day became a celebration. The work well noted that the Rosa Parks, December 1955 bus event "unified the black community. f the momentous Montgomery bus boycott. " 6 The movements successes in the South were the cause of anxiety in the North, whites felt as though racial equality would threaten the security of it's jobs, schools and homes. Sitkoff utilizes available primary resources such as Why We Can't Wait by Martin Luther King Jr. Kennedy was forced to act due "breakdown of civilized rule. ) In conclusion Sitkoff reports the numerous civil rights setbacks suffered by the black community, listing the 1978 Supreme Court Bakke decision as a devastating blow to African American expectations. The work is a chronological informative summation stressing the significance of civil rights in American history. The election of both Ronald Reagan and George Bush are regarded as defeats, according to the author. The author relates the 1968 riots following the death of Dr.
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