The Civil Rights Movement In Dann Berger's 'The Captive Nation'

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Introduction Over the years, the civil rights movement has evolved from just protests and sit-ins into a serious political and social movement. The movement has enlarged its focus from not only fighting for legal barriers to black opportunity but for the far elusive equality. Various members of the civil rights movement have sought legislative seats and have better organized their members into political and social groups that focus on specific issues like poverty, mass incarceration of the black people, police brutality and social equality. Different writers like Dann Berger and Annelise Orleck have documented the struggles of the black folk in distinct contexts. Their books have highlighted how the black movement has morphed into political platforms that could better air the grievances of the African-American people. This essay will analyze the Captive Nation by Berger …show more content…

The book, studying the prison system in the 1970s, zeros in on how the black protests intersected with suppression by the state. The book highlights the character of George Jackson and how he influenced other revolutionaries both inside and outside of the prison system. The book’s narrative helps the reader understand the emotions behind the activists’ fight for justice and equality. Berger insists on the skewed notion of the criminal justice system since it disproportionately focuses on the black community with continuous harassment, convictions and unsanctioned killings. This, coupled with the recent brutal murders of Eric Garner and Michael Brown by the police continues to show the inherent bias in the American society. The police routinely stop people of African descent and question them for no particular reason. Besides, the more than 1.5 million people of color incarcerated underscores the veracity of Berger’s

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