EPISODE · May 31, 2022 · 3H 19M
C.T. Vivian's Black Power and the American Myth: 50th Anniversary Edition
from Full Audiobooks in Non-Fiction, Current Affairs, Law, & Politics · host C.T. Vivian
Please visit https://thebookvoice.com/podcasts/1/audiobook/586650 to listen full audiobooks. Title: Black Power and the American Myth: 50th Anniversary Edition Author: C.T. Vivian Narrator: Matthew J. Harris Format: Unabridged Audiobook Length: 3 hours 19 minutes Release date: May 31, 2022 Genres: Social Science Publisher's Summary: In 1970, C. T. Vivian, a close colleague of Martin Luther King, Jr. and a member of his executive staff, sat down to take stock of the civil rights movement and the progress it had made. His assessment was that it failed, and that the blame lay in the existence of myths about America. As prophetic today as it was fifty years ago, Vivian's voice rings out as a critique and a call to action for a society in deep need of justice and peace. The civil rights struggle that began when Rosa Parks, a seamstress in Montgomery, Alabama, decided to sit in the front of a bus has deeply altered American society and the American conscience. Yet from several perspectives, that movement has resulted in failure. The Black struggle for independence is more of an uphill climb than ever. Why? C. T. Vivian asserts that the civil rights movement failed because it was built on certain myths about America: ● the myth that Americans will do what is right as soon as they know what is right. ● the myth that legislation leads to justice. ● the myth that America is an open society where any minority group can advance. ● the myth that an ethic of love forms the core of the American conscience.
What this episode covers
Please visit https://thebookvoice.com/podcasts/1/audiobook/586650 to listen full audiobooks. Title: Black Power and the American Myth: 50th Anniversary Edition Author: C.T. Vivian Narrator: Matthew J. Harris Format: Unabridged Audiobook Length: 3 hours 19 minutes Release date: May 31, 2022 Genres: Social Science Publisher's Summary: In 1970, C. T. Vivian, a close colleague of Martin Luther King, Jr. and a member of his executive staff, sat down to take stock of the civil rights movement and the progress it had made. His assessment was that it failed, and that the blame lay in the existence of myths about America. As prophetic today as it was fifty years ago, Vivian's voice rings out as a critique and a call to action for a society in deep need of justice and peace. The civil rights struggle that began when Rosa Parks, a seamstress in Montgomery, Alabama, decided to sit in the front of a bus has deeply altered American society and the American conscience. Yet from several perspectives, that movement has resulted in failure. The Black struggle for independence is more of an uphill climb than ever. Why? C. T. Vivian asserts that the civil rights movement failed because it was built on certain myths about America: ● the myth that Americans will do what is right as soon as they know what is right. ● the myth that legislation leads to justice. ● the myth that America is an open society where any minority group can advance. ● the myth that an ethic of love forms the core of the American conscience.
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C.T. Vivian's Black Power and the American Myth: 50th Anniversary Edition
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