The Rhetoric of Black PowerRobert Lee Scott, Wayne Brockriede The public statements of such leaders as Stokley Carmichael, Hubert Humphrey, and Martin Luther King, Jr. are analyzed with respect to the black power issue. |
Contents
The Social Power of the Negro by James P Comer | 10 |
Martin Luther King Jr Writes About the Birth of | 25 |
Address at the NAACP Convention July 6 1966 by Hubert | 65 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
achieve American argue Atlanta black community Black Power advocates brothers Chicago civil rights movement coalition color confrontation continued applause create criticism Detroit develop dollars essay exploitation fight Floyd McKissick force freedom ghetto goals going hate hope Hubert Humphrey Humphrey institutions integration issue July justice King's major Malcolm X Martin Luther King means ment Meredith militant Mississippi move NAACP NAACP convention nation Negro community Negro leaders nonviolence Operation Breadbasket oppression organization person political and economic position power structure problem question Quoted racial racism Rap Brown recognize response revolution rhetoric of Black riots Roy Wilkins SCLC Sealtest segregation Selma movement sense shouts and applause slavery slaves slogan SNCC social South speaker speech Stokely Carmichael struggle talk tell thing tion unity Vietnam violence white audiences white community white liberals white power Whitewater York