ESSAYS ON LITERATURE

 

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Essay on Martin Luther King Jr. Vs Malcolm X


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Essay on Martin Luther King Jr. Vs Malcolm X

The 1912 Election and the Power of Progressivism

Progressivism has remained a subject reserved for a strong but less prominent band of historians interested in the period between the upheaval of the Civil War and the Great Depression. However leaving the twentieth century behind scholars of the Progressive Era seems to be shaking off their second-class status and asserting a claim to the leading place in explaining the political changes of the twentieth century. Social scientists interested in the rise of the state, social capital theorists, political philosophers, and historians have all contributed studies suggesting people need to go back to the turn of the century to understand politics and reform in late-twentieth century America. Taking this as a jumping of point, the historians and political scientists who have contributed essays to Progressivism and the New Democracy collectively that the Progressive Era, rather than the New Deal, was the fundamental sharper of the twentieth century American political order (Flehinger, Brett).

King Vs Malcolm In The Civil Rights Struggle: An Introduction

The emergence of Martin Luther King, Jr. as a civil rights leader brought a new tactic to the movement: nonviolent resistance. This method of peaceful protest was a combination of the teachings of Mahatma Gandhi and Jesus. King described it as "a philosophy deeply embedded in our religious tradition."

Malcolm X (1925-1965) stood in sharp contrast to King and his philosophy of nonviolent resistance and racial integration. X was born Malcolm Little, the son of a Baptist preacher who followed Marcus Garvey. Although they only met once, Malcolm X was often asked his opinion of Martin Luther King Jr. and the civil rights movement. At first disrespectful of King and his strategies, Malcolm later began to be aware of the worth of and even began cautious participation in the movement.

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