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Civil Rights Movement

Essay by   •  February 6, 2014  •  Essay  •  308 Words (2 Pages)  •  995 Views

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The Civil Rights Movement completely uprooted American society as it was. For decades, whiteially, race created a floor beneath which the white man could not fall. That is to say that black people were the bottom-feeders of society pre-Civil Rights Movement, elevating every white man in society to a position of power. Economically, black people were kept out of mainstream commerce. Even black businesspersons who managed to attain success were successful due to black patrons. Though all of the impacts the Civil Rights Movement had on society yielded positive results for the space for black people, it was the political upheaval that resulted in the most progress. That is to say that using their political leverage, black people were able to culminate the Movement with gains in legislation: the Civil Rights Act and Voting Rights Act.

The most profound impact of the Civil Rights movement was its manifestation in the upheaval of social norms. From the time West Africans were imported into the United States they were subjugated and treated as something less than human. Even after slavery was legally abolished, white institutions had established black people as a second-class citizen. For fear of being hanged, black people were not even allowed to look white men in the eye. They were not allowed to sit in certain places or even participate in certain activities--like sports--that were reserved for Caucasians. The Civil Rights Movement completely uprooted that social construction of segregation and subjugation. One way black people contested the soople from voting. However, it is the political leverage of the black community that results in the landmark legislation effectively ended the legal barriers to black life.

The Civil Rights movement completely changed American society. Essentially, the Movemshment of British-controlled American society, history repeated itself in the Civil Rights Movement.

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