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Guilt, Empathy and Reason - How Photojournalism Supported the Civil Rights Movement (Paperback)
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Guilt, Empathy and Reason - How Photojournalism Supported the Civil Rights Movement (Paperback)
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Seminar paper from the year 2013 in the subject American Studies -
Culture and Applied Geography, grade: 1,7, University of Paderborn,
language: English, abstract: The African American Civil Rights
Movement of the 1950s and 1960s can be seen as one of the major
events in America's history that fundamentally changed its entire
society. In one of the most liberal countries in the world that
defeated fascism and fought against communism, people of different
ethnicity were still treated differently. While white people
enjoyed all the rights, black people were excluded from public
places, did not have the right to vote and were punished more
severely than their fellow citizens. But the African American
population stood up against these kinds of suppression and
segregation in the middle of the 20th century and fought for their
rights, especially with the help of their leading figures such as
Martin Luther King Jr., Rosa Parks and Malcolm X. Even if they
could eventually achieve some of their goals such as the abolition
of segregated buses or the right to vote, their peaceful movement
was most of the times violently stopped by policemen and white
civilians. Due to this unequal fight, the blacks' demands and
sufferings captured more and more the media's attention and were
documented especially through photography. This photography had a
high impact on how the Civil Rights Movement was perceived all over
the country and, as a consequence, indirectly helped the protestors
in their plans. Interestingly enough, it is remarkable that nearly
all these printed photographs show the Movement in a way that was
unknown to people so that special emotions towards black people and
the own behaviors were evoked: empathy and guilt. This then led to
a new debate about racial discrimination and civil rights. In this
term paper I will therefore examine in more detail in which way
photojournalism supported the African American Civil Rights
Movement. I will start by giving a short overview of p
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