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United States [1933-1945]

United States [1933-1945]

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A Portrait of Maya Angelou

58 minutes
Source: Social Studies School Services

Library Resource February 3, 2010
A World on Display

53 minutes

Library Resource December 15, 2009
America and the Holocaust: Deceit and Indifference

81 minutes, black & white and color
Source: Social Studies School Service

Library Resource December 15, 2009
Banished

87 minutes
Source: California Newsreel

In this documentary fimmaker Marco Williams expores three communities that forcibly expelled African American residents between the Civil War and the Great Depression, replacing Reconstruction with Jim Crow laws. The film explores the question of reparations: what do the residents of these now all-white towns owe to the families they drove out? Residents of Pierce City, Missouri; Harrison, Arkansas; and Forsyth County, Georgia are interviewed.

 

Library Resource December 15, 2009
Becoming American: The Chinese Experience

4 episodes, 90 minutes each
Source: PBS Video

What does it mean to become American? In interviews with historians, descendants, and recent immigrants, Bill Moyers explores this question through the experience of the Chinese in America.

Library Resource December 15, 2009
Before Stonewall: The Making of a Gay and Lesbian Community
89 minutes
Source: First Run Features

In 1969 the police raided the Stonewall Inn, a gay bar in New York City’s Greenwich Village, leading to three nights of rioting by the city’s gay community. With this outpouring of courage and unity the Gay Liberation Movement had begun. Before Stonewall pries open the closet door—setting free the dramatic story of the sometimes horrifying public and private existences experienced by gay and lesbian Americans since the 1920s.

Related lesson:

Library Resource December 15, 2009
Bill Moyers on Confronting our Past
Video Clip June 8, 2009
Chicano!

4 videotapes, 57 minutes each
Source: out of print

Since the time of the Mexican-American War of 1846-1848, Mexican Americans have struggled to achieve equality and full rights as citizens of the United States. This 4-part series examines pivotal events concerning land, labor, education, and political empowerment that took place between 1965 and 1975, the period that was the focus of the Mexican-American civil rights movement.

1. Quest for a Homeland

Library Resource December 15, 2009
Conversations: Before the War/After the War

29 minutes, black & white
Source: Center for Asian American Media

Three fictionalized characters reveal their personal experiences and feelings as they explore the deep and lasting effects of the internment of Japanese Americans. They explore the dichotomy of their identities before the war and versus after the war.

Library Resource December 15, 2009
Culture Shock

270 minutes on 4 VHS tapes
Source: Out of print

This four-part series explores the often uneasy role of the arts in society through a series of controversial works and genres.

1. Born to Trouble: Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (90 minutes)

Library Resource December 15, 2009
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