Davis, Joshua2020-12-032020-12-032018-12-11Davis, J.C. ( 2018, December 11). The Civil Rights Movement for Intellectual Change. Black Perspectives. www.aaihs.org/the-civil-rights-movement-for-intellectual-change/.http://theweeklychallenger.com/the-civil-rights-movement-for-intellectual-change/http://hdl.handle.net/11603/20182More than half a century since the 1960s, scholars and citizens alike continue to grapple with how our country should remember the civil rights movement. To many observers, the movement’s calls for political change—to refashion America into an anti-racist democracy—represents its most profound legacy. Others remember the movement as a force for moral change. Largely forgotten, however, is how civil rights activists created a movement for intellectual change. Martin Luther King Jr., for instance, is widely recalled as an unimpeachable moral authority, as a master orator, and as a fierce proponent of democracy. But how many Americans today recall him as the powerful intellectual that he was–the inveterate reader and theoretician that many of his contemporaries knew him as?en-USPublic Domain Mark 1.0Civil Rights MovementStudent Nonviolent Coordinating CommitteeFreedom RidesSNCCcivil rights organizationBlack popular historyleading literary figuresWhite supremacyBlack Arts movemntsIntellectual transformationThe Civil Rights Movement for Intellectual ChangeText