国務省出版物
歴史
ついに自由を我らに – 米国の公民権運動
1. 奴隷制の米国への拡大
2.「他の人間の5分の3」 -棚上げされた約束
3.「分離すれど平等」 -「再建」の失敗に対するアフリカ系米国人の反応
4. チャールズ・ハミルトン・ヒューストンとサーグッド・マーシャル -人種隔離制度に対する法的な挑戦の開始
5.「運動が始まった」
6.「このままではいけない」 -法的平等の確立
7. エピローグ
Free At Last: The U.S. Civil Rights Movement
- Masthead
- Slavery Spreads to America: Introduction
- A Global Phenomenon Transported to America
- Slavery Takes Hold
- Slave Life and Institutions
- Family Bonds
- “Three-Fifths of Other Persons”: A Promise Deferred
- A Land of Liberty?
- The Pen of Frederick Douglass
- The Underground Railroad
- By the Sword
- The Rebellious John Brown
- The American Civil War
- “Separate but Equal”
- Congressional Reconstruction
- Temporary Gains … and Reverses
- The Advent of “Jim Crow”
- Booker T. Washington: The Quest for Economic Independence
- W.E.B. Du Bois: The Push for Political Agitation
- The Legal Challenge to Segregation
- Charles Hamilton Houston: The Man Who Killed Jim Crow
- Thurgood Marshall: Mr. Civil Rights
- The Brown Decision
- “We Have a Movement” - Introduction
- “Tired of Giving In”: The Montgomery Bus Boycott
- Sit-Ins
- Freedom Rides
- The Albany Movement
- Arrest in Birmingham
- Letter from Birmingham Jail
- “We Have a Movement”
- The March on Washington
- “It Cannot Continue”: Establishing Legal Equality
- Changing Politics
- Lyndon Baines Johnson
- The Civil Rights Act of 1964
- The Act’s Powers
- The Voting Rights Act of 1965: The Background
- Bloody Sunday in Selma
- The Selma-to-Montgomery March
- The Voting Rights Act Enacted
- What the Voting Rights Act Does
- SPOTLIGHT: The Genius of the Black Church
- SPOTLIGHT: Black Soldiers in the Civil War
- Marcus Garvey: Another Path
- Ralph Johnson Bunche: Scholar and Statesman
- Jackie Robinson: Breaking the Color Barrier
- Rosa Parks: Mother of the Civil Rights Movement
- Civil Rights Workers: Death in Mississippi
- Medgar Evers: Martyr of the Mississippi Movement
- White Southerners’ Reactions to the Civil Rights Movement