Asked by yo mama
Analyze how African and Black American movements countered assimilation in the colonial to post-Revolutionary War period.(1 point)
Responses
These movements countered assimilation by allowing enslaved African and Black American people to nurture their own artistic practices and religions, as well as stand up for their political and economic rights.
These movements countered assimilation by allowing enslaved African and Black American people to nurture their own artistic practices and religions, as well as stand up for their political and economic rights.
These movements countered assimilation by allowing enslaved African and Black American people to nurture their own artistic practices and religions, as well as stand up for their political and economic rights—but only outside the U.S.
These movements countered assimilation by allowing enslaved African and Black American people to nurture their own artistic practices and religions, but not stand up for their political and economic rights.
These movements countered assimilation by allowing enslaved African and Black American people to nurture their own artistic practices and religions, but not stand up for their political and economic rights.
These movements countered assimilation by allowing enslaved African and Black American people to stand up for their political and economic rights, but not nurture their own artistic and religious practices.
These movements countered assimilation by allowing enslaved African and Black American people to stand up for their political and economic rights, but not nurture their own artistic and religious practices.
All Answers 1
Answered by
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These movements countered assimilation by allowing enslaved African and Black American people to nurture their own artistic practices and religions, as well as stand up for their political and economic rights.
Brief explanation: They preserved African-derived cultural and religious practices (e.g., music, oral traditions, Gullah culture, independent Black churches) while organizing petitions, legal appeals, manumissions, mutual aid societies, and resistance actions that asserted political and economic claims rather than accepting full assimilation.
Brief explanation: They preserved African-derived cultural and religious practices (e.g., music, oral traditions, Gullah culture, independent Black churches) while organizing petitions, legal appeals, manumissions, mutual aid societies, and resistance actions that asserted political and economic claims rather than accepting full assimilation.
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