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PBS Releases New Film on Reconstruction
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Hosted by
Henry Louis Gates, the series features noted scholars and writers including
Shawn Leigh Alexander,
Toni P. Anderson,
Edward Ayers,
David Blight,
Vincent Brown,
Jelani Cobb,
Christy Coleman,
Kimberlé Crenshaw,
Greg Downs,
Eric Foner,
Steven Hahn,
Nikole Hannah-Jones,
Thomas Holt,
Tera Hunter,
Martha Jones,
Kate Masur,
Angie Maxwell,
Edna Greene Medford,
Khalil Muhammad,
Imani Perry,
Heather Cox Richardson,
Chad Williams,
Heather Williams, and
Kidada Williams.
Last year, the Zinn Education Project launched the Teach Reconstruction campaign because Reconstruction is full of stories that help us see the possibility of a future defined by racial equity. Yet the possibilities and achievements of this era are too often overshadowed by the violent white supremacist backlash. Too often the story of this experiment in interracial democracy is skipped or rushed through in classrooms across the country. Today ---- in a moment where activists struggle to make Black lives matter ---- every student should probe the relevance of Reconstruction.
Our campaign helps teachers uncover the hidden, bottom-up history of this era.
Our lessons on Reconstruction have become the most frequently downloaded from the Zinn Education Project website. The lessons, described below, can be useful for teachers in conjunction with the new PBS documentary series.
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Reconstructing the South: A Role Play
This role play engages students in thinking about what freedpeople needed in order to achieve
---- and sustain
---- real freedom following the Civil War. It's followed by a chapter from the book
Freedom's Unfinished Revolution on what would happen to the land in the South after slavery ended.
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When the Impossible Suddenly Became Possible: A Reconstruction Mixer
This lesson introduces students to individuals in the Reconstruction era social movements, including the labor movement, women's rights, and voting rights movements that followed the Civil War. They explore the opportunities and challenges in building alliances. In the mixer, each student takes on the role of a different person involved in the social movements of the time.
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Another key resource is the spring issue of
Rethinking Schools with the theme of teaching about Reconstruction. The lead editorial,
Why We Should Teach Reconstruction, begins:
Next year is the 150th anniversary of the 15th Amendment
---- when Black men won the right to vote. Voting rights of Black people have been under attack ever since. . . . It is unfortunate that in all the coverage given to voter suppression, there has been little attention devoted to the struggles that led to the 15th Amendment in the first place. Reconstruction, the era immediately following the Civil War and the abolition of slavery, is full of lessons for students, teachers, and activists.
Reconstruction was the first era of Black Power. Black people across the South took the lead in defining the meaning of freedom. Blacks and poor whites began to chip away at the racist ideology that had justified slavery for nearly two centuries, by taking the reins of state governments across the South from the old slave-owning elite.
Continue reading.
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PO BOX 73038, WASHINGTON, D.C. 20056
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