Analysis Of Selma

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Selma 2014 film: The Quest for Voting Rights in America

“Selma” is an interesting documentary film that conveys the unforgettable, real story of the 1960s’ Civil Rights Movement in the United States. The 2014 film captures the riotous three-month protest in 1965 when Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. spearheaded a daring clamor for equal suffrage rights in an environment accompanied by violent opposition from agents of the status quo. The heroic protest from Selma to Alabama’s capital, Montgomery, prompted President Lyndon Johnson’s assent to the Voting Rights Act of 1965. The Act is believed to be among the most imperative gains for the agents of civil rights and freedoms in the 20th century America. Director Ava DuVernay ensured that "Selma" chronicles how Dr. King Jr, his family and supporters under the egis of the Civil Rights Movement brought about social change that has since then improved the American society by granting previously discriminated communities a political voice.

States within the US have established laws providing direction on most activities relating to …show more content…

An advisory requiring Congress to immediately enact a law reviewing the coverage formula would have upheld the voting rights of African Americans secured though street marches as evidenced in “Selma” (Blacksher and Guinier 37). The ruling further implies that previously disenfranchised

communities will be treated the same way as the mainstream whites in contravention of the affirmative action clause. Accordingly, the law is still needed to protect the minority voting rights because while America more liberal and transparent previously disenfranchised communities could still be facing whole new challenges registering as voters or participating in

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