African Americans In The 1950s Essay

536 Words2 Pages

The 1950s can be describe as the era of great changes, it was the end of Korean War, civil rights movement and the United States economy was flourishing; citizen was moving from countryside to suburban house and life was prosperous. But the racial climate was very hostility for African-American living in the United States constantly. For centuries, African-American had been suffer from inequality and prejudice because of the color of their skin. Altschuler states “Rosa Park was arrested for refusing to comply with municipal ordinances, (Altschuler, p. 36, 2003)” that launched black passenger to boycott Montgomery city transportation. This sparks many other African-American to fight for their rights like Dr. Martin Luther Kings, many singers/musicians and other main figures; but it was not long after groups like the Ku Klux Klan (KKK) and other white supremacist decide to attacked African-American such as the killing of a teenager Emmitt Till, beaten Nat King Cole and others, emotionally and physically abuse that makes it very hard in the Black community. These are some of the momentous events in the history of an African-American’s experience. For the first time, the Jim Crow rules was target and rattle by the landmark court ruling of Brown vs Board of Education by the highest Supreme court; many whites rejected this ruling. School segregation was an …show more content…

The face of this melodic journey was changing and the music reflects many tensions but the upbeat sound was electrified. Rock n roll show their audience a new perceptive on the insight of discrimination and prejudice that began the mold to eliminate this “separate but equal”

Open Document