美国黑人民权运动PPT课件
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Education
• For every $150.000 spent on white children at the "white schools" only $50.000 was spent on African American children at the "black schools."
• The civil rights movement was a mass popular movement to secure for African Americans equal access to and opportunities for the basic privileges and rights of U.S. citizenship.
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2. Historical background
• Early in its history, black Africans were brought to America as slaves. They were bought and sold, like animals.
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• Nearly 100 years after the Emancipation Proclamation, African Americans in Southern states still inhabited a starkly unequal world of disenfranchisement, segregation and various forms of oppression, including race-inspired violence. "Jim Crow" laws (美国针对黑人实施的 种族隔离法案) at the local and state levels barred them from classrooms and bathrooms, from theaters and train cars, from juries and legislatures.
• The parents of the African American children thought that their school was not treated as fairly because they were colored. They did not have the most current textbooks, not enough school supplies, and overcrowded classroom9s.
How can we call those black people
Negro
Spanish word "black"”
Negro / Nigger
Darkie
African American
Black
African American
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黑人牙膏 Darkie
disrespectful
Darlie
In 1985, an American company bought this toothpaste company and changed its name.
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African-American Civil Rights Movement
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Outlin e
1. Brief introduction 2. Background information 3. Major events 4. Influence
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Hale Waihona Puke What is civil rights
movement
• The civil rights movement was the largest
social movement of the 20th century in the
United States. It influenced the modern
women's rights movement and the student
"Black elementary school"
"White elementary school"
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3. Major events
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1954
• Brown Decision--Separation Is Inherently Illegal
The 1954 U.S. Supreme Court decision Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas ushered in a new era in the struggle for civil rights.
movement of the 1960s.
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• Although the roots of the movement go back to the 19th century, it peaked in the 1950s and 1960s. African American men and women, along with whites, organized and led the movement at national and local levels. They pursued their goals through legal means, negotiations, petitions, and nonviolent protest demonstrations.
This landmark decision
outlawed racial segregation in
public schools.
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1955
• On December 1, 1955
• Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat for a white passenger.
• arrested
• demand a more humane bus transportation system
• lasted for more than a