All in all, Mr. Morrison stood up against white people and didn’t accept that others thought of him as a lower person because he was black. Mr. Morrison thought of himself as a normal person despite white people thinking lower of him. He carried himself the same way he would have if he were white. You know what, the whites that thought they were high and mighty had…
Being black and gay in the 1950s wasn’t the best thing you could be, being a black male 6 feet tall wasn’t either. James Baldwin and Brent Staples both suffered from discrimination in the 1950s. James Baldwin was an African-American writer who was discriminated in the public for being black, while Brent Staples was discriminated in the public because of how he looked and dressed. Brent Staples moved to Manhattan where was treated wrong. Staples was called different things during his time in New York. His appearance scared the public wherever he went. Many people started to worry he was going to rob them or even try to kill them. Staples tried to change the way he dressed and acted but the public still acted the same. James Baldwin’s situation was different, he was discriminated while going to a restaurant. The restaurant didn’t serve to black people, Baldwin then lost his temper and started saying bad comments about the place, “I do not know why, after a year of such rebuffs, I completely failed to anticipate his answer, which was, of course, “We don’t serve Negroes here.” This reply failed to discompose me, at least for the moment. I made some sardonic comments about the name of the diner and we walked out into the streets.”(Baldwin, pg.58).…
The work of A. Phillip Randolph has paved the way for the society today. His efforts contributed to the progressive eradication of discrimination in the United States of American and have made it easier for person of color to achieve social mobility.…
“Well, sweetie, your father and I did not have the money to design our own child like all of our friends were doing at the time.”…
“The man who believes in nonviolence is prepared to be crushed, but will not crush others” (Bayard Rustin). Bayard Rustin was one of American’s first freedom writers. He was involved in the March on Washington, Civil Rights, Montgomery Bus Boycott, peace movements, and other things such as the Freedom House where he would travel to different countries to help out people in need. Rustin lived his life as an out gay person, his homosexuality had a huge impact on the way people viewed him. Many people do not know of Bayard Rustin because he is hardly mentioned. Bayard Rustin was a Quaker, which means that he is non-violent. He wanted the US to work together as a family and stop discrimination. His grandmother had taught in to stand up for what he believed in, but to not use violence to get his point across. Rustin wanted the people to understand that they are all one family and to stick together and look after each other. Bayard Rustin changed the lives of many people, and in return, he only wanted one thing: equality among people.…
Bayard Rustin is an unknown civil rights hero of his time. He gave great effort on advocating civil rights and was part of the first freedom rides in 1947. Bayard Rustin, an openly gay black man, helped introduce Gandhi nonviolence to the civil rights movement. Unfortunately, Rustin was put in jail for refusing to participate in World War II. However, while in jail Rustin organized protests against the segregated seating in the dining halls and helped the civil rights movement by having Congress back him for Racial Equality. Also, Rustin was National Field Secretary for the Fellowship of Reconciliation. Following his release from prison, Rustin began to travel widely, giving speeches on discrimination and other issues. While on a tour of North Carolina, he provoked another arrest for violating Jim Crow laws. Rustin is a great example of how so much has changed in this country from slavery until now. Without Rustin’s bravery, along with every African-American that changed the history of America with black and white support overcame segregation in the south. I believe that we learn every day from everyone including Harriet Tubman, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., and all social advocates for civil rights in America. These people put their life on the line for the beliefs in equality. Without their bravery African-Americans wouldn’t have the same rights and to me that is not human. We are all human regardless of skin color. Frankly, I wish that racism never existed. Sexuality and Race are two totally different things; however I see the gays struggle with equality and African-Americans still have an everyday fight in this country for equality. I believe you could analyze and compare civil rights of African-Americans and gays as wanting to be treated as human, regardless of race or sexual orientation. We cannot choose who we were born to be. Everyone should be treated equal.…
and wanted every person to have the same rights, we should all be treated as equals. Martin Luther…
Clarence King, described by many as a man of a thousand words did nothing but live up to those expectations. He was born in 1842 in Newport, Rhode Island and was said to be one of the best and brightest men of his generation and has forever changed how we look at the history of our country. In the story he seemed to always be broke and borrowing money, but at every moment she could the author spoke of how caring and kind King was to other people he met. King was a man, who for 13 years passed as black and basically led separate secret lives. For many people, including those who haven’t read, “Passing Strange” would find it basically unimaginable that some white male, secretly lived a life of a black man. His picture and figure represent that of a normal built white American. Most would believe that pigmentation or other signs would give up King and show him to the world as a fake. But in the story, “Passing Strange“, by Martha Sandweiss, the author digs deep to find the real understand to King’s secrets.…
2.1 Explain why effective communication is important in developing positive relationships with children, young people and adults.…
From the 1920s to the mid-1930s in Harlem, New York, the movement known as the Harlem Renaissance took place in which not only inspired many to young writers, singers musician and other artists to put themselves out there and to not be afraid to be themselves. Of the Harlem Renaissance, the ones who stood out the most were, Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, Gertrude “Ma” Rainey, Bessie Smith,and Lucille Bogan to name a few. In this list actually there is many whom consider themselves to be apart of of the LGBTQ community such as Gertrude “Ma” Rainey, Langston Hughes, Bessie Smith and Lucille Bogan. The African American Women of the Harlem Renaissance fought homophobia and heteronormativity by sharing their thoughts and feelings through their lyrics, about being bisexual, gay or lesbian.…
Sexuality, like many other things in our world, is an ever changing thing. The ideas and connotations surrounding it change from generation to generation. Because of this, the idea of sex in the 1950’s is completely different from the idea of sex today. Today, sexuality can be expressed in almost anything we do. Commercials, billboards, TV shows, movies, magazine articles, and many other things are driven and influenced by the idea of sex. People today cannot escape the sexuality that surrounds us. However, things were not always like this. In the 1950’s, sex was a taboo topic. Nobody talked about it, it wasn’t used in advertisements,…
Even though Thoreau spent a short time in jail, he never took action. Martin Luther King devotes his belief in equality for all men, in spite of their race and color. The ideas presented by Henry Thoreau in 1849, were just as important to the Civil Rights Movement. Thoreau’s theories on unjust laws seemed to organize the arguments enacted by King during the Civil Rights Movement. The actions of the Civil Rights Movement is attributed from Civil…
During a battle to stop a proposition in California that would investigate and fire all possible homosexual teachers, Harvey Milk wrote these verses: “I can be killed with ease, I can be cut right down, But I cannot fall back into my closet, I have grown, I am not by myself, I am too many, I am all of us” (Shilts 287). He has become a symbol of hope for all minorities. His constant mantra was always “You gotta give them hope” (Cloud 1). Instead of being simply a liberal, he always focused on bettering society brick by brick by campaigning for the things that he knew needed to be fixed. He considered gays who only supported their liberal friends weak, and fought simply for his own ideals, not for his political party (Shilts 80).…
Harvey Milk, was a visionary civil and human rights leader who became one of the first openly gay elected officials in the United States when he won a seat on the San Francisco Board of Supervisors in 1977. Milk’s unprecedented loud and unapologetic proclamation of his authenticity as an openly gay candidate for public office, and his subsequent election gave never before experienced hope to Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgendered (LGBT) people everywhere at a time when the community was encountering widespread hostility and discrimination. His remarkable career was tragically cut short when he was assassinated nearly a year after taking office.…
Sigmund Freud believes the attributes of the unconsciousness in the human mind are the Id, Ego, and Superego. All humans have these characteristics, but one may be more prominent than another. The Id is the impulsive selfishness of the human mind. The Superego is the moral, rational part of the mind. The Ego mediates between the selfishness and the rational thoughts in humans. In the novel The Scarlet Letter by Nathanial Hawthorne, each character represents one attribute. Even though Hester Prynne sinned, her moral behavior afterward represents the Superego; Roger Chillingworth’s selfish behavior shows the Id, and Pearl, who mediates the impulsive and rational thoughts of Hester Prynne and Author Dimmesdale, represents the ego.…