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Journal of e-Media Studies, Volume 7 Issue 2: Accessible Civil Rights Heritage

Charbonneau Abstract

This essay analyzes and contextualizes four historic newsfilms featuring rebellion and resistance along the coastal region of South Florida during the civil rights struggles of the fifties and sixties. With the support of the Media Ecology Project (MEP), I integrate recent interventions into Floridian cultural studies, media historiography, and newsfilm studies to assess past televisual depictions of the most prominent “wade-ins” that took place along South Florida’s coastline. Through close textual analysis, I argue that local newsfilm from this region uniquely treats Floridan shores as allied with a colonial legacy in which African Americans’ presence is indicative of insurgence. And yet such a legacy is increasingly questioned in local news broadcasts thanks to civil rights organizers’ deep awareness of the value of representation and public perception as the Civil Rights Act nears passage.

KEYWORDS: Florida; Civil Rights; Newsfilm; Race; Media History

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