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8 result(s) for "African Americans Civil rights History Cartoons and comics."
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I see the promised land : a life of Martin Luther King, Jr.
Presents in graphic novel format the life of the Baptist minister and Noble Peace Prize winner who became the leader and orator of the African American civil rights movement before his assassination in 1968.
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Tony Norman column
Throw in the fact that 2015 also marks the 50th anniversary of the march from Selma to Montgomery, Ala., and the passage of the Voting Rights Act and you have a rare thing in an awards season -- a Hollywood movie that resonates with the blood and guts of American history, then and now.
Martin Luther King Jr. and the March on Washington
\"The protest known as the March on Washington was one of the most inspiring episodes of the civil rights movement. Galvanized by events in the South, civil rights protesters from around the country gathered in Washington, DC, to demand Congress pass President Kennedys civil rights bill. More than a quarter of a million people showed up to the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. Among the speakers was Martin Luther King Jr., whose I Have a Dream speech became one of the greatest orations in American history. This exciting graphic novel uses dramatic illustrations and accessible text to capture the emotion and power both of the march itself and of Kings memorable speech.\"--Provided by publisher.
ECHOES OF AN ERA - BAM AND NAM
At The Wall, for example, Gwendolyn Brooks, a 1950 Pulitzer Prize winner, and fellow Chicagoan Haki Madhubuti, founder of Third World Press, performed spirited poetic debate on the degree of black consciousness equated to skin color.