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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 3 page paper which examines how Martin Luther King Jr.’s assassination affected African Americans and the Civil Rights Movement. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JA7_RAaasj.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
they were adults at the time of his assassination or otherwise alive and aware of his assassination, people have no idea what took place right after the assassination and what
took place as a result of the assassination. It was an incredibly time and Kings assassination was a crucial event in the turmoil of the 60s. As one author notes,
"Kings assassination was itself soon followed by the murder of Robert Kennedy, violence at the Democratic National Convention, and a general unraveling of the country into a period of violence
and despair" (Mary Ferrell Foundation, 2009). The following essay examines the affects that Kings assassination had upon the African American people, the Civil Rights Movement, and society. The
Affects of Martin Luther King Jr.s Assassination In relationship to immediate reactions and affects, many riots erupted across the nation when King was
killed: "Riots across America, resulting in thirty-nine deaths and 14,000 arrests" (British Association for American Studies, 2009). The assassination of King came close on the heals of the deaths of
Medger Evers and Malcolm X and this seemed to be the straw that broke the camels back, so to speak: "this one was one assassination too many. Naturally, there was
an immediate feeling of shock, anger, outrage, indignation and violent reactions across the land" (Osondu, 2009). aS a result thousands of African Americans hit the streets and many demonstrations became
violent (Osondu, 2009). "White people were targeted by the rampaging black youths. White owned businesses were destroyed" (Osondu, 2009). People were clearly
angry, lost, and confused. One individual noted that it was because of television coverage of Kings assassination, and constant coverage of King, that sparked the riots and then perhaps encouraged
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