What role did television play in the civil rights movement?

What will be an ideal response?


ANSWER: By the 1960s, television had become the medium of choice for most Americans to learn about the world. Though options were more limited then, television still offered a level of immediacy that no other medium could match. Students should examine how television coverage of Martin Luther King, Jr.'s campaigns in Birmingham and Selma, as well as the March on Washington brought the problem of segregation home to Americans throughout the country. Also, the Watts Riot revealed that African Americans faced challenges not just in the South. The television coverage made these events much more real and made
Americans more sympathetic to the cause of civil rights, even if they lived far from the site of the events.

History

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William Howard Taft's Central American policy was called __________.

A. the "big stick" B. "dollar diplomacy" C. "American exceptionalism" D. the "Open Door"

History

During Reconstruction, most disagreements within the Republican Party centered on _________

A) tax issues B) land reform C) who should run for office D) campaign strategies

History

The New Culture Movement at Peking University

a. attempted to "Modernize China in Four Years." b. advocated a return to the study of classical Confucian concepts. c. rejected all Western thought. d. advocated the study of science and democracy and "new" and largely Western ideas. e. sought a balance between existential philosophy and Confucian values.

History

Which area was not subject to terrorist attacks in recent history?

A) London B) Spain C) Russia D) Northern Ireland E) Finland

History