Down To The Crossroad Summary

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The primary focus of nonviolent demonstration during the 1960’s eroded from emerging militancy, outcries of the Vietnam War, and the Government attention, however Goudsouzian depicts these uneasy strands together in Down to the Crossroad: Civil Rights, Black Power, and the Meredith March against Fear. Told from a narrative perspective, Originally launched by James Meredith, he attracted activists from across the nation to join the march. The big march gained national and international attention, but depended on the politics of small communities, the resolve of black Mississippians, along with strategies of white officials. The march thus finds a balance between local and national. The March against fear lasted for three weeks and covered 200 …show more content…

Its meaning and manifestation captured the complexity of black freedom struggle, especially when the movement emerged from the crucible of the march of fear. Goudsouzian shows how black power was more than just a bogeyman creeping in the middle of the night for black rage. It signified the growth of the civil rights movement, thus demanding that black people control black communities, expressing their pride and heritage, built on a legacy of thinkers, and considering race and democracy in international …show more content…

Yet it is the events between these two images that spurred the movement, such as side bar protests and tense confrontations with Mississippi whites that tell the real story. It also highlights a critical time for Dr. Martin Luther King in the Meredith march as he undergoes through an evolution. The march somehow painted a step for King has he united the different stands of the civil rights movement, now he was trying to appeal to the people’s best instinct, well as acknowledging the real roots of the black power. He was continually in the political center of the march, wrestling with these issues all the time, in the very graceful why he often

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