instead of SRQ for Friday; we will meet in class on Monday to discuss it. M 10/15: In class: wrap-up of Fuller; beginning Thoreau. Read: Henry David Thoreau, intro (825-29) and “Resistance to Civil Government” (a.k.a. “Civil Disobedience,” 829-44). Please complete your response on the Fuller discussion forum by 8 a.m. and also write an SRQ on Thoreau’s “Civil Disobedience” essay. Use the note-taking guide to help with Thoreau’s essay. Questions on Fuller: First, a caution: Fuller uses names
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Civil disobedience is the idea that people should respectfully and peacefully resist laws they find immoral. The idea Began in The Mexican American War when the abolitionist Henry David Thoreau refused to pay taxes. He thought that the war would help expand slavery as most of the land won in the war would become slave states. Many would use This idea throughout U.S. history. Civil disobedience has been a positive way to impact a free society. One example of this was the walk out movement in East
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shall we transgress them at once?” (Henry David Thoreau, 1849, “Civil Disobedience”) According to “Documents of Freedom,” Civil disobedience is when “Men such as Martin Luther King, Jr. violated unjust laws but willingly accepted the punishment that came with violating the law… often confused with simply violating laws that you do not like…Civil disobedience demands to accept the punishment otherwise, there would be no principled distinction between civil disobedience and mere lawlessness” (“The Documents
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all the horrors of the lower class to stop (Haskins 32). Gandhi performed strikes, boycotts and fasts against the British government and he did it in a nonviolent way. King would use Gandhi’s nonviolent tactics in much of his involvement with the civil rights movements. He called for nonviolence not only because of his dedication to the teachings of Christ but also because it was the only practical way of changing the ‘Negro; condition. (Coretta Scott King pg
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peaceful, some not peaceful, protests. These protests are an example of civil disobedience. “Civil disobedience is the active, professed refusal to obey certain laws, demands, and commands of a government, or of an occupying international power. Civil disobedience is a symbolic or ritualistic violation of the law, rather than a rejection of the system as a whole.” - Henry David Thoreau. One of the oldest examples of civil disobedience is the Ancient Greek play Antigone by Sophocles. Nelson Mandela used
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lived in the 20th century. They fought and led many people to obtain their freedoms through nonviolent ways. Both were extraordinary men who were influenced by Henry David Thoreau’s Civil Disobedience. Gandhi used what he learned in Civil Disobedience to help free India from imperial Britain. While King used his new knowledge to led the Civil Rights Movement in order to improve the injustice that was directed toward the African America citizens. Both Gandhi and King used similar methods to lead their
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countries, the United States being a key example. The growth shown through peaceful movements that protest oppressive laws and views has been beneficial to society as a whole; led by the views and actions of people like Martin Luther King Jr., Henry David Thoreau, and Ghandi. When a country claims to be free, certain natural liberties are implied. One can assume that they would have a certain degree of involvement in their government, and if they cannot speak out about what they might see as a corrupt
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In “Civil Disobedience”, Henry David Thoreau attempts to gain the support of his readers and highlights negatives found in the government shown in his statement that “I ask for, not at once no government, but at once a better government.” He disagrees with the allocation of tax spending and believes that the election system is powerless. He implies that citizens wishing to join his revolution should start by not paying taxes to support the government. Thoreau uses rhetorical questions, allusion and
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people, whether they do so by defying a law or a social construct. From South Carolina’s secession in 1860 to the civil rights movement in the 1960s to Gandhi, law has never been in the way of people demonstrating their ideals. Even before any of the above occurred, citizens were standing against any form of tyrannical oppressor. Henry David Thoreau, in his 1849 essay, “Civil Disobedience”, highlights the almost necessity of rising against those in power. Uprisings can be traced back to almost every
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We the students All through out moments in history, there have been instances where civil disobedience has been used. Civil disobedience is defined as the act of opposing a law one considers unjust and peacefully disobeying it while accepting the consequences. Moments where we have seen this are the Civil Rights Movement which is one of the prime examples of it. Another one would be Ghandi and what he was able to do. Now a question which might be asked constantly is whether peaceful resistance to
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