African-American Civil Rights Movement

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    Maya Angelou's Life

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    Maya Angelou was born on April 4, 1928 as Marguerite Annie Johnson in St. Louis, Missouri. She was the second child of Bailey Johnson and Vivian Baxter. At the age of three her parents marriage ended and she and her older brother Bailey ( who was 5 at the time ) was sent to live with their father’s mother, Annie Henderson in Stamps,Arkansas. Angelou’s grandmother Annie was the child of freed slaves and also became the leader of the black community in Stamps. She was the owner of the only…

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    age, she fell in love with books, literature and poetry. Maya spent most of her life conveying messages through her words and music. She had a strong belief in the African- American life style.() As an artist she used her words to express her feelings and emotions to her audiences. She was an American poet, memoirist and civil rights activist. In her life, she published many autobiographies and books of poetry, also debuting in any movies and plays and television shows for over 50 years. At a…

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    going day to day having to fight for your rights to do simple everyday things normally just because the color of your skin is not white. Well, that is exactly what happened in the 1960’s for African Americans throughout the United States. Instead of physically fighting, desegregationists (both blacks and whites), peacefully took their stand by participating in protests to trying and influence the US government and make a permanent change to our civil rights as we know them today. These protests…

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    the community over its injustice, is in reality expressing the highest respect for the law” (Martin Luther King Jr.). The term ‘civil disobedience’ was first used by Thoreau in his 1848 essay to describe his refusal to pay for the taxes to prosecute a war in Mexico and to enforce the Fugitive Slave Law passed by the American government. Throughout history, acts of civil disobedience have been successful in helping to cause a reexamination of society's moral parameters. Amongst the multitude of…

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    something you will fall for anything”(Malcolm X). Malcolm X was an African-American Muslim minister and human rights activist. He was assassinated February 21, 1965 by rival Black Muslims while addressing his Organization of Afro-American Unity at the Audubon Ballroom in Washington Heights. His followers looked at him as a courageous advocate for the rights of blacks, while he was there for the harshest term for crimes against black americans. People call him a preacher of racism and violence.…

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    Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X fought for equal rights for all African Americans across the United States. King and Malcolm X were both influential in the civil rights movement, but they actually only met once and exchanged just a few words. Martin Luther King Jr. with the bible in one hand and nonviolence in the other. Malcolm X was the opposite with the Quran in one hand and violence in the other. Both men would become known for their styles; the good, the bad, and the ugly. From the…

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    one of the most influential African women of all times. She is best known for her famous poems about injustices, tribulations, and experiences that she went through. For instance, Still I Rise, Phenomenal Woman, and I know why the caged bird sings, are some of her examples. Angelou was not only a famous poet, but an inspirational speaker, book writer, civil rights activist, actress, and dancer. One of her most fascinating accomplishments is being the First African American woman, to have her…

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    things Angelou did in her life and poetic career. To begin with, Maya Angelou was an African American civil rights activist and poet. Maya was born on April 4th, 1928 in Stamps, Arkansas. ”As an African American child, Angelou experienced firsthand prejudices and discrimination in Arkansas”(Info from Biography.com). As a child she was also sexually…

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    Maya Angelou is one of the most famous African-American women figures. Many well known writers and people inspired Angelou to write some of her most famous pieces of work, also inspired her to get involved in the civil rights movement. Angelou has many famous works, however she is very well-known for: I know why the Caged Bird Sings. In that autobiography, Angelou pours out the first seventeen years of her life, then writes about her years following in another. Maya Angelou is a well known…

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    uerite Ann Johnson was born in St. Louis, Missouri on April 4, 1928. Raised in Stamps, Arkansas she experienced prejudice and discrimination because she was of African American descent. Her life course is chronicled in her biographies and poems. From her southern education and religious beliefs thru adversity to single motherhood and her self classification as an entertainer. She became a prominent and significant voice of our time. The life course of this remarkable woman which, we will all…

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