Create and discuss an art piece portraying your understanding of the relationship between the Black Panther Party and other “U.S.Third World” social justice organizations. 200 words
Reflect on your experience learning through art this semester. 200 words
What top 2 lessons from the Black Movements of the 60’s would you pass on to leaders of today’s Black liberation movements? 200 words
What 2 mistakes or actions would you advise today’s leaders to avoid based on your study of the Black Movements of the 60’s?
https://www.pbs.org/video/unlikely-allies-first-rainbow-coalition-lj5fue/
The British electoral system was unrepresentative and outdated because education was lacking. The public did not have input. They knew little about politics prior to generalised literacy, which opened access to see holes in the system. Add to this any type of secret society being illegal, and the possibility that laws were put in place to prevent protest, seems evermore likely. As without such activist groups, how can a protest be arranged? Mass education is the direct answer to all of the above, and literacy is the direct vehicle of information.
The Luddites functioning from 1811-1816, are an earlier example of protest towards the Industrial Revolution. A group of Nottingham workers met in private, planning to destroy machinery. They felt their skills for the crafts they had learned and mastered were being forgotten, as machines replaced labour. The physical way in which the Luddites functioned did not require literacy, yet they generated a large following, this was in part due to the amount of attention vandalising machines would receive, in the form of reward posters, that unintentionally advertised the movement. Though it must be mentioned, the Luddites did write threatening letters to officials and factory owners.
This physical approach of protest however, did not work in their favour as the hostility was eventually met by military force. Luddites being shot by factory owners was also a frequent occurrence. The motives behind the Luddites were radical, if they were politically inclined instead, they might have been more successful. In addition to the development of protest towards the industrial revolution, this also represents the drastic and violent response of the government.