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The Rosa Parks Effect

In The Rosa Parks Effect, Rosa Parks’s arrest motivates Martin Luther King Jr. to advance non-violent protests on a larger scale, making him a prominent figure in the Civil Rights Movement in the United States. This video is excerpted from BBC’s Infamous Assassinations, a documentary series about high-profile murders and attempted murders of public figures, narrated by actor Robert Powell.

Video Details
Location:
Montgomery, Alabama
Program:
Infamous Assassinations
Time:
2:04
Topic:

Lesson Express

Q: How did the arrest of Rosa Parks change the Civil Rights Movement?
A: It motivated people to enact larger protests, like the Montgomery bus boycott.

Q: What made Rosa Parks’s arrest so effective as an event in the Civil Rights movement?
A: Students may mention that Parks was an unassuming figure and that the act she was arrested for was something that people did every day. They may also talk about how it happened within the context of broader protests and violent events.

Q: How did the Montgomery bus boycott change Martin Luther King’s trajectory? Do you think King would have become as large a figure without the bus boycott?
A: The events after the bus boycott made King a national figure. Student responses will vary.

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