Spring 2019, AMH 2020: U.S. History Since 1877 Paper Option #3: 1960s-1970s Social Movements DUE WEDNESDAY, 4/17 This paper is worth 15% of your final grade for this course Sources to Use: Your paper...

1 answer below »
the entire assignment is in the file I uploaded


Spring 2019, AMH 2020: U.S. History Since 1877 Paper Option #3: 1960s-1970s Social Movements DUE WEDNESDAY, 4/17 This paper is worth 15% of your final grade for this course Sources to Use: Your paper should be based primarily on the assigned primary sources from Canvas that are relevant to the social movements of the 1960s-1970s; a good paper will use at least 2-3 primary source documents. You should also use relevant information from the textbook and your lecture notes to supplement your analysis and provide necessary historical context in this paper. You may not use unassigned, outside sources for this paper with the exception of images you might wish to include in your paper (see below for explanation about images). Overview: In your Primary Source Analysis paper, you began to develop your skill in reading and contextualizing primary sources and using them to learn something about the past. This analytic paper asks you to build upon those skills by using a group of primary sources to develop your own critical analysis, interpretation, and argument about a historical period and to find meaning in past events. These sources will provide the necessary evidence to support your historical interpretation and argument about the various social movements of the 1960s-1970s that collectively made up the U.S. “rights revolution.” Assignment: In 4-6 pages (that means FULL pages), do the following: Pretend you work for a museum, and the museum director – your boss - has asked you to design an exhibit for the general public on the social movements of the 1960s-1970s (feminism, gay rights, Red Power, Chicanx, etc. – all social movements except the civil rights movement - because the second paper option covered the civil rights movement). Write an exhibit proposal addressed to your boss, the museum director, that describes your proposed exhibit, your reasons for designing the exhibit that way, and the main message(s) you want your audience to receive by visiting your exhibit. Your boss has also asked several of your colleagues to submit proposals, so you must convince the museum director to approve your proposed museum exhibit instead of one of the other proposals that she is considering. Choose at least two social movements from the 1960s-1970s, and develop an argument that you would like to present to your audience about the history of these movements and why these movements are important. Once you develop your argument, you must explain how you will present that argument to your audience in your exhibit – i.e., will this be a physical exhibit or a digital exhibit and why? What will your exhibit title be and why? What kinds of objects, documents, photos, etc. will you include and why? How will you design the exhibit so that your argument will be clear to your audience? How will you get 2 your audience to understand why your argument is important? In other words, so what? *You may include images/drawings in your exhibit proposal, but these will not count toward the required page limit of 4-6 full pages of double-spaced text.* In writing your paper, you must develop your own, overarching argument (a thesis) and support that argument with specific, detailed, relevant evidence from the primary source documents and textbook. You must also choose a theme upon which to focus. You cannot cover all aspects of the 1960s-1970s social movements, so choose just a few themes/examples that you can construct an argument about and for which you have strong evidence. In writing your paper, focus on articulating and supporting your argument. Do not simply summarize the documents or provide a narrative of what occurred. Instead, explain what they tell us about a larger issue of the 1960s- 1970s social movements and why that issue is important. You should be making a claim that someone else could potentially disagree with, and you should work to persuade the museum director that your claim is correct and that your proposed exhibit design is the best way to get that message across to the members of the public who visit your museum exhibit. In other words: 1) Develop and articulate an argument (thesis) about the 1960s-1970s social movements that you would like to present to the visitors to your museum exhibit. 2) Your exhibit must focus on at least two of the 1960s-1970s social movements in the U.S. - feminism, gay rights, Red Power, Chicanx, etc. –except the civil rights movement (because the second paper option covered the civil rights movement). However, you may refer to the civil rights movement/Black Power movement in your proposal if you believe that is important to explaining your exhibit (i.e., historical context, influences on the movements you’ve chosen, etc.). Just make sure your exhibit is primarily focused on the other social movements. 3) Use your textbook and the assigned primary source documents from Canvas (AMH 2020-001) to provide information and evidence that support, contextualize, and illustrate your argument and exhibit design. Follow the instructions on sources to make sure you are using the correct number and types of sources for this assignment. 4) Make sure that your exhibit argument is clear, that you articulate that argument in a clear thesis sentence at the start of your paper, and make sure that your entire paper is structured to support your argument/analysis. 5) Use specific examples, information, and quotes from the primary sources and the textbook to support your exhibit argument and description of your exhibit design. You can also use your lecture notes, but most information should come from the primary sources and the textbook. 6) Be sure to explain all of your examples and information clearly and fully so that a smart person who is not taking this course and who does not know the full history of the social movements (in other words, your boss, the museum director) can understand your paper and your argument. The first time you mention a person, for instance, provide that person’s full name and 3 explain who that person was. If you mention an event, provide the date(s) and explain what that event was, etc. And make sure the relevance of all evidence and examples is very clear for your reader. In other words, explain your thought process and explain the significance of all evidence and examples. Don’t assume that your reader will understand what you mean; be explicit and thorough. 7) Be as clear as possible in describing the way you will design your exhibit, and provide a clear explanation of the reason(s) for each choice you make about how you will design your exhibit. 8) You may include images/drawings – for instance, a sketch of the proposed exhibit or examples of some of the objects/images/documents you want to include in the exhibit - in your exhibit proposal, but these will not count toward the required page limit of 4-6 full pages of double-spaced text. Provide a caption for each image that includes a description of the image and a citation for each image that you did not draw/create yourself (where did you get it?). Make it clear why you have included that image in your proposal. 9) Cite all of your sources using Chicago Style footnotes (see handout on Canvas). 10) Follow the paper formatting directions. 11) Follow the paper submission directions. Paper Structure: This is not a typical academic essay paper, but your exhibit proposal should still have a formal and logical structure, as well as footnotes for your citations. This paper should be comprised of full paragraphs. No paragraph should be shorter than 3 sentences (anything shorter is an incomplete thought), and no longer than 2/3 of a page (any longer, and it becomes a run-on paragraph). Every new point, topic, or sub-argument should get a new paragraph. Always put book titles in italics and primary source titles in “quotations.” Put your name, your Monday discussion section (AMH 2020-003, -004, -005, or -006), your TA’s name, and your exhibit title on the top of the first page, and put page numbers at the bottom of each page. To earn a high grade, your paper must have a clear, concise thesis statement in your introduction (one declarative sentence that clearly states your exhibit’s argument), and you must support your argument and exhibit design choices throughout your paper by using concrete, relevant, specific evidence and quotations from your sources. Your paper must also contain proper grammar, punctuation, and spelling and be structured in a manner that makes your argument clear and persuasive. Remember, you are writing for your boss, the museum director, so you want your proposal to be as polished and professional as possible. A paper that does not rely upon specific primary source evidence from multiple primary source documents and that does not also incorporate specific information from the textbook and lectures will not earn full credit. You must also CITE all of your sources properly throughout the paper using Chicago Style footnotes (see the handout on the Modules page on Canvas (lecture section) on how to do 4 footnotes). You do not need to include a Chicago Style Bibliography at the end of the paper. Your footnotes – if done well – will provide the necessary information on all of the sources you used. You must include a footnote every time you use information that does not come from your own head or from your lecture notes – that means every time you use a direct quote and every time you paraphrase from the textbook or primary sources, even if you put that information in your own words. A properly cited paper should have several footnotes per page. Planning ahead and working through multiple drafts is the key to earning a high grade on this assignment. DO NOT WAIT UNTIL THE LAST MINUTE TO WRITE THIS PAPER. Format your paper as follows: 1) Your entire paper should be in 12-point, double-spaced, Times New Roman font with 1-inch margins on all sides. 2) At the top of the first page of your paper, put the following memorandum header (without the brackets – fill in the relevant information the brackets below): MEMORANDUM TO: Museum Director, [Museum Name] FROM: [Your Name] CC: [Your TA’s Name], [Your Monday Discussion Section] Date: [Date] Re: Exhibit Proposal: [Exhibit Title] ****************************************************************************** [Start your paper text below the above memorandum header] 3) Your first paragraph should be
Answered Same DayMar 06, 2021

Answer To: Spring 2019, AMH 2020: U.S. History Since 1877 Paper Option #3: 1960s-1970s Social Movements DUE...

Soumi answered on Mar 09 2021
139 Votes
1
Last Name:    9
Name:
Professor:
Course:
Date:
Title: Spring 2019, AMH 2020: U.S. History Since 1877
Paper Option #3: 1960s-1970s Social Movements
MEMORANDUM
TO: Museum Director, [Museum Name]
FROM: ________________________
CC: [TA’s Name], [Monday Discussion Section]
Date: ________________________
Re: Exhibit Proposal:
*********************************************************
******************
Introduction
There are ample evidences that history presents in front of us when it comes to the social struggle related to equality and equal rights for every community. It has been found that treating people from other genders except male as inferior has always been a stereotypical thought found prevalent in the society. Especially the time period of 1960 to 1970 has presented numerous struggles and revolutions done by communities in demand for equal rights. Social movements like ‘Gay Rights Movement’ and ‘Second Feminism Wave’ prove this assumption that they were the inferior and ill-treated communities of that period that is why they had to choose the path directed towards illegal acts and violence[footnoteRef:1]. [1: Shawn Donnelly, 2018. "Men Will Be Men: Feminism and LGBT Rights: HIV Equal". Hivequal.Org. http://www.hivequal.org/hiv-equal-online/men-will-be-men-feminism-and-lgbt-rights.]
There is a lot about these movements, of which most people are unaware and by this exhibition, I want to reflect on the discrimination, ill treatment, struggle and revolts that these communities faced, with, at last, achieving their vision. I want to reflect all the typical stereotypes related to anthropological behavior that was prevailing regarding sexuality and gender inequality. Using digital means such as projectors, live videography, presentations I would like to present the untold truth about these movements. If we broadly visualize the long prevalent concepts of sexuality and gender inequality, it will not be wrong considering a common root for both these movements.
Gay Rights and Feminism Movements
Today what we refer to as ‘LGBT’ (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender) is a result of evolution from the ‘Gay Rights Movement’ of 1960s and 70s. This can be supported by the argument that there were a number of factors that facilitated gay sex in society such as the transition from rural to urban society, emphasizing more on the sexual pleasure among couples and capitalism boosted this by providing people more choices for sexual intercourse than compared to their previous generations[footnoteRef:2]. Thus, the opportunities to discover their sexual orientation was also increasing. Although in the past, there were ample scopes of expressing their sexual desires; however, the society showed a sense of skepticism, which prohibited the open exhibition of feelings. It was only recently, when the sexual orientations of the homosexual individuals could come out in the public. [2: Eleanor Robertson, "Get mad and get even: Liberal feminism and the second wave undertow." Meanjin 75, no. 1 (2016): 91.]
This study also presented that World War II was a major factor in the promotion of gay sex since, men were out there fighting for months and the arousing sexual need encouraged gay sex. With the ending of World War II in 1945, this practice started spreading all over and it was then considered as a sin or a taboo in the society. However, the fight for equal rights began, although it took a massive turn in the 1960s that Gay Liberation at that point was seen as a national movement in the US that looked towards the distinction between sexual preferences and categorization of new sexuality that is, gays, lesbians, transgender and bisexuals[footnoteRef:3]. [3: David Paternotte and Manon Tremblay. 2016. The Ashgate Research Companion To Lesbian And Gay Activism. London: Taylor and Francis]
The Riot at Stonewall Inn
This was the turning point for the Gay Liberation Act as on 28...
SOLUTION.PDF

Answer To This Question Is Available To Download

Related Questions & Answers

More Questions »

Submit New Assignment

Copy and Paste Your Assignment Here