Saturday, October 15, 2016
Jackie Robinson and Major League Baseball
Abstract\nThe steer of this essay is to examine the ratiocination behind the eventual consolidation of the MLB. Was it solely due to Jackie Robinsons ability to tolerate hatred and threats, and on top of that proving he was an exceptional baseball game player, or were there different hide factors involved? Whatever the conclude Jackie Robinson would play a polar role in the desegregation of the MLB, once known as the white league. Which would in the long run give rise to the intimately important movement in the history of the United States of the States: The Civil Rights Movement. This movement would transform the image of the nation and would be essential for its future succeeder.\nWas Jackie Robinson exclusively in the integration of major League Baseball, and for what reasons surrounding Jackie was he successful in integrating the MLB? Or were there other factors that aided Jackie in baseballs great experiment? This paper investigates these questions. This text f ile investigation in Jackie Robinsons integration of baseball is base on primary sources from newspapers, articles, and journals, along with secondary sources written by historians providing a range of viewpoints on Jackie Robinson, the integration of the MLB, as hygienic as other factors proving important in Jackies success.\nThe result gained is that Jackie Roosevelt Robinson was able to initiate the mental process of integrating the MLB fully by proving blacks were an honorable, virtuous race, that had the ability to reach the athletic level of whites in Major League baseball and stand out as players of excellence. Though Jackies success remains on the shoulders of the drive few who carried him down his bridle-path to the Major leagues and success, along with the promotional material he received in doing so, changing hatred to sympathy, establishing the imbibe point of the change of a nations view on the African American culture.\n\nA. Introduction\nThe US had just conc luded [in 1945] battle a war against fascism, raci...
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