Opinion

‘Frontline’ film ‘American Reckoning’ gives a broader view of the civil rights fight

Mainstream narratives characterize the civil rights movement as only utilizing nonviolent tactics.

Photo collage: Images of a Wharlest Jackson Sr, Wharlest Jackson Sr's family, Wharlest Jackson Sr's mangled truck, and James Jackson against an image of  background.
Local NAACP leader Wharlest Jackson Sr., top left, was killed after his vehicle exploded, bottom left, in 1967 in Mississippi. His family, top left, has been searching for justice for decades. – Four images in center grid of artwork, from top left to bottom right, Wharlest Jackson Sr, Wharlest Jackson Sr's family, Wharlest Jackson Sr's mangled truck, and James Jackson.PBS / William E. Stewart Collection Historic Natchez Foundation; ABC News; National Archives; Amistad Research Center

Keisha N. Blain

Keisha N. Blain is an award-winning historian and writer. She is a professor of Africana studies and history at Brown University and has written extensively about race, gender and politics in national and global perspectives. Her most recent book is “Until I Am Free: Fannie Lou Hamer’s Enduring Message to America.”