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ID125317
Title ProperDreams of a bygone era
Other Title Informationre-envisioning civil rights in the modern age
LanguageENG
AuthorLee, Kristine, Ed.
Publication2013.
Summary / Abstract (Note)In August of 1963, the United States was swept up in unprecedented mass mobilization. Two hundred thousand Americans--black, white, rich, and poor from across the nation--poured into the National Mall in Washington, D.C. armed with picket signs, freedom songs, and a fervent dedication to the light for equality before the law. The March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, the venue at which Martin Luther King Jr. uttered his lamed "I have a dream" incantation, was a watershed moment in the long and tumultuous civil rights struggle in the United States. It set' forth new genre of civil rights activism and became a template for subsequent generations of political protest around the globe. Indeed, over the course of the ensuing decade, university students in France aligned themselves with trade union workers to subvert the Gaullist regime, the military dictatorship in Brazil struggled to withstand the escalating guerilla warfare leveled against it, and opposition to the Vietnam War simmered across the United States, London, Paris, Berlin, and Rome..
`In' analytical NoteHarvard International Review Vol.35, No.2; 2013: p.34-36
Journal SourceHarvard International Review Vol.35, No.2; 2013: p.34-36
Key WordsWar ;  Conflicts ;  Violence ;  Civil Rights ;  Human Rights ;  Civil War ;  Cold War ;  Vietnam War ;  United States ;  NATO ;  EU ;  Guerilla Warfare ;  Ethnic Violence ;  United Kingdom ;  Italy ;  Germany ;  France ;  EU - 3 ( Germany, France & UK) ;  Brazil