How History Gets the Reality of Social Change Wrong | Elizabeth Booker Houston | TEDxMidAtlantic
By TEDx Talks
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Everyone knows the story of Rosa Parks: tired feet, a single refusal, a bus boycott that sprang up overnight and a Supreme Court that set things right. Elizabeth Houston says nearly all of that is wrong — and that the way it's wrong has a name. Not misinformation or disinformation, but malinformation: true facts arranged to mislead. The clean, one-woman myth of Montgomery, she argues, quietly erases the years of organizing, the names you were never taught, and the unglamorous case that actually desegregated the buses — and in doing so it teaches us exactly the wrong lesson about how change happens. That lesson matters to her right now. Houston left her federal job this year after the mass firings hit her household, and she carries a phrase a stranger handed her in a White House security line: "the sun will rise again." Her bet is that the sun rises not on heroes and magical moments, but on ordinary people doing small things, persistently, over a long time — the part of every movement
Tags: Culture, Education, English, Global Issues, History, Social Change, TEDxTalks, [TEDxEID:62191]
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