Georgetown University home page Search: Full text search Site Index: Find a web site by name or keyword Site Map: Overview of main pages Directory: Find a person; contact us About this site: Copyright, disclaimer, policies, terms of use Georgetown University home page Home page for prospective students Home page for current students Home page for alumni and alumnae Home page for family and friends Home page for faculty and staff Georgetown University Search: Full text search Site Index: Find a web site by name or keyword Site Map: Overview of main pages Directory: Find a person; contact us About this site: Copyright, disclaimer, policies, terms of use
Navigation bar Navigation bar
spacer spacer spacer spacer
border
spacer spacer spacer
border
spacer spacer

HIST-295 Civil Rights, 1860-1960

HIST-295 Civil Rights, 1860-1960
Spring only
Faculty:
  • Jackson, Maurice
  • The African American struggle for equality stands as a unique and epoch-making saga in the quest for equal rights and human dignity. It serves as a guidepost to any and all peoples who have suffered from racial and ethnic discrimination in the USA. This struggle had and still has domestic, national and international dimensions. In this course we will investigate the origins and flowering of the “Civil Rights Movement” in America and study the developments and outcomes of the struggle to secure equal rights for African Americans. We will make the necessary links between the African American experience and the broader human rights issues. The course will use primary sources (many are now in book form) to chronicle both legal barriers and legal milestones related to the issues. We will examine violent acts against African Americans and both violent and nonviolent forms of resistance to discrimination. We will follow the everyday actions of the American people to secure equality for the descendants of former slaves. Special emphasis will be paid to the united efforts of African Americans, whites, and peoples of other ethnic backgrounds who have played prominent roles in the African American journey, from slavery to freedom and beyond.
    Credits: 3
    Prerequisites: None
    Other academic years
    There is information about this course number in other academic years:
    More information
    Look for this course in the schedule of classes.

    The academic department web site for this program may provide other details about this course.
    spacer spacer
    Navigation bar Navigation bar