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Well, protest is central to the evolution of black American culture. It was protest that really finally won our freedom for us. Beyond that, it's always interesting to note that it expanded the idea of democracy.
Shelby Steele
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Interpretation

What this quote means

Protest has played a crucial role in shaping black American culture and championing democracy.

This quote emphasizes the significance of protest in the journey towards freedom and the evolution of black American culture. By asserting that protest not only facilitated the liberation of black Americans but also broadened the concept of democracy, Shelby Steele implies that active resistance and expression are vital for cultural and societal growth.

Themes

ProtestCultureFreedomDemocracyChange

In practice

Example use cases

This quote can be used in a speech about civil rights and social justice movements.

More from Shelby Steele

To this day it is all but impossible for me to actually stop and think of my parents as white and black or to think of myself, therefore, as half and half.
Shelby SteeleRead
Through protest - especially in the 1950s and '60s - we, as a people, touched greatness. Protest, not immigration, was our way into the American Dream. Freedom in this country had always been relative to race, and it was black protest that made freedom an absolute.
Shelby SteeleRead
The 'safe spaces' for minority students on university campuses are actually redemptive spaces for white students and administrators looking for innocence and empowerment.
Shelby SteeleRead
The evil of slavery and colonialism was that these oppressions kept their victims out of history, disconnected them from the evolutionary struggle.
Shelby SteeleRead
Emmitt Till had walked into a cultural narrative in which his role was already tragically written. It was a narrative designed to preserve white supremacy. So it gave power - the right to kill - to any white claiming to defend the honor of white women.
Shelby SteeleRead
Blacks have experienced a history of victimization in America, beginning obviously in slavery and then another 100 years of segregation. I grew up in segregation. I know very well what it was about and all of the difficulties it placed on black life, and how we were truly held down before the civil-rights movement.
Shelby SteeleRead

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