“To what extent did soul music from 1955 to 1968 positively influence the spread and outcome of the Civil Rights Movement in the Southern United States?”
Words: 2193
Identification and Evaluation of Sources
This investigation will answer “To what extent did soul music from 1955 to 1968 positively influence the spread and outcome of the Civil Rights Movement in the Southern United States?”. The analyzed sources are Ricky Vincent’s 2013 novel Party Music: The Inside Story of the Black Panthers' Band and How Black Power Transformed Soul Music and the 2018 article “1968: Soul Music and the Year of Black Power” published on the African American Intellectual History Society (AAIHS) website by Mark Anthony Neal, relevant due
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The value of the origin is found within the author, who is well versed in the topic of political music, being the son of a Black Panther, and writing two award winning books about the connection between music and political movements. The purpose of this novel is to show how the Black Panther movement influenced music in the 1960s. The novel discusses how the Black Panther movement worked with and funded various musicians such as Marvin Gaye and Curtis Mayfield to spread awareness of the Civil Rights Movement. The purpose is valuable because it explains how soul music developed as a result of the political struggles of African …show more content…
It was a reality at that time for women to submit to traditional roles, and as a result, soul musicians included it in their lyrics. Soul songs helped people learn about black culture and empathize with black people (Raussert 196). Additionally, aggression in music was necessary to spark a will to fight in African Americans. If African Americans only sang about positive aspects of life, less people would have known about their oppression, meaning they would have fewer allies to support them in their campaign for