The Impact Of Freedom Summer On The Civil Rights Movement

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1964, lasting for ten weeks from June-August. Freedom Summer was a movement that was focused in Mississippi with the intention of registering as many black voters as possible. It was a turning point in Civil Rights. Freedom Summer Accelerated Civil Rights through Non-Violence, Media, and White Participation. The events of Freedom Summer greatly impacted the passing of both the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and the Voting Rights act of 1965. The use of Non-Violence greatly impacted the way many had seen the Civil Rights movement. The idea was promoted by Martin Luther King Jr. It had “Highlighted the compelling moral contrast between peaceful blacks demanding basic American rights and a violent white political leadership determined to deny them those rights”-Freedom Summer Reading. This had allowed the movement to gain sympathy from many, including Whites. That being the case, support for the movement had soon skyrocketed being that much of it was televised. …show more content…

Media played possibly the largest role in the portrayal of Freedom Summer and the Civil Rights Movement. Southern Whites resorted to violence constantly, but with the use of the media “television cameras projected into the homes of millions of Americans disturbing images of police dogs mauling elderly black women and fire hoses knocking innocent children to the ground”-Freedom Summer Reading. The use of Non-Violence and the Media are connected, being one couldn't work without the other. Non-Violence showed the contrast in ideals and the true violence the Blacks were shown, while the Media had allowed these stories to reach the entire country, acting as a call to arms to all who wish to fight for Civil

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