The Interwar Years and the New Deal 1915-1941 · 1915 – 1941
Marcus Garvey and Black Nationalism
Evaluating the impact of the UNIA and the appeal of the "Back to Africa" movement.
Key Questions
- 1Why did Garvey's message resonate more with the masses than the NAACP's?
- 2How did Garveyism influence future Black Power ideologies?
- 3To what extent was the decline of the UNIA due to federal persecution?
National Curriculum Attainment Targets
A-Level: History - Civil Rights in the USA 1865–1992A-Level: History - Black Nationalism and Pan-Africanism
Year: Year 13
Subject: History
Unit: The Interwar Years and the New Deal 1915-1941
Period: 1915 – 1941
Suggested Methodologies
Ready to teach this topic?
Generate a complete, classroom-ready active learning mission in seconds.
More in The Interwar Years and the New Deal 1915-1941
The Harlem Renaissance and the New Negro
Assessing the significance of the cultural and intellectual explosion in 1920s Harlem.
3 methodologies
The Resurgence of the KKK
Analysing the 1915 rebirth of the Klan and its expansion into a national political force.
3 methodologies
African Americans and the New Deal
Evaluating whether FDR's policies helped or hindered Black Americans during the Great Depression.
3 methodologies
Labour Unions and Racial Tensions
Examining the role of A. Philip Randolph and the struggle for fair employment practices.
3 methodologies