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Pretty much from the beginning, the strike is also a protest against racial discrimination, white supremacy, and sexism, as an all-black, almost all-female force of minimum-wage workers goes up against the entrench white power structure--the hospital president, the Charleston police department, even the governor. Civil rights leaders like Coretta Scott King (barely a year after her husband's murder), Ralph David Abernathy, and Andrew Young arrive in Charleston to give support to the determined workers, who refuse to back down.
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Pretty much from the beginning, the strike is also a protest against racial discrimination, white supremacy, and sexism, as an all-black, almost all-female force of minimum-wage workers goes up against the entrench entrenched white power structure--the hospital president, the Charleston police department, even the governor. Civil rights leaders like Coretta Scott King (barely a year after her husband's murder), Ralph David Abernathy, and Andrew Young arrive in Charleston to give support to the determined workers, who refuse to back down.
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--> "I may be black, but I am somebody! I may be poor, but I am somebody!"
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--> "I may be black, but I am somebody! I may be poor, but I am somebody!"somebody!"
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[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/i_am_somebody_madeline_anderson.jpg]]
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''I Am Somebody'' is a 1970 short film (28 minutes) directed by Marian Anderson.
It is a documentary of the 1969 [[https://ldhi.library.cofc.edu/exhibits/show/charleston_hospital_workers_mo hospital workers' strike]] in Charleston, South Carolina. In March 1969, nurses' aides and workers at the Medical College Hospital in Charleston go on strike, protesting poverty-level wages ($1.30 an hour) and the unjust firing of 12 pro-union hospital employees. Local 1199B walks out of the job and begins picketing the hospital. Soon workers at the Charleston County Hospital join their strike.
Pretty much from the beginning, the strike is also a protest against racial discrimination, white supremacy, and sexism, as an all-black, almost all-female force of minimum-wage workers goes up against the entrench white power structure--the hospital president, the Charleston police department, even the governor. Civil rights leaders like Coretta Scott King (barely a year after her husband's murder), Ralph David Abernathy, and Andrew Young arrive in Charleston to give support to the determined workers, who refuse to back down.
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!!Tropes:
* {{Documentary}}: Of the 1969 Charleston hospital workers' strike.
* FreezeFrameEnding: Ends with a freeze-frame of the narrator walking along the edge of Charleston harbor, as in voiceover she recounts how they won wage increases and a grievance process.
* MatchCut: From the clopping heels of a horse drawing a tourist carriage, to the feet of the marching strikers.
* {{Narrator}}: Offscreen narration throughout from one of the striking workers.
* NoNameGiven: The striking worker who narrates the film is never named,even when she appears on camera.
* TalkingHeads: Some of the strikers are interviewed on camera.
* TitleDrop: From the chant of the workers as the cops are bearing down on them.
--> "I may be black, but I am somebody! I may be poor, but I am somebody!"
It is a documentary of the 1969 [[https://ldhi.library.cofc.edu/exhibits/show/charleston_hospital_workers_mo hospital workers' strike]] in Charleston, South Carolina. In March 1969, nurses' aides and workers at the Medical College Hospital in Charleston go on strike, protesting poverty-level wages ($1.30 an hour) and the unjust firing of 12 pro-union hospital employees. Local 1199B walks out of the job and begins picketing the hospital. Soon workers at the Charleston County Hospital join their strike.
Pretty much from the beginning, the strike is also a protest against racial discrimination, white supremacy, and sexism, as an all-black, almost all-female force of minimum-wage workers goes up against the entrench white power structure--the hospital president, the Charleston police department, even the governor. Civil rights leaders like Coretta Scott King (barely a year after her husband's murder), Ralph David Abernathy, and Andrew Young arrive in Charleston to give support to the determined workers, who refuse to back down.
----
!!Tropes:
* {{Documentary}}: Of the 1969 Charleston hospital workers' strike.
* FreezeFrameEnding: Ends with a freeze-frame of the narrator walking along the edge of Charleston harbor, as in voiceover she recounts how they won wage increases and a grievance process.
* MatchCut: From the clopping heels of a horse drawing a tourist carriage, to the feet of the marching strikers.
* {{Narrator}}: Offscreen narration throughout from one of the striking workers.
* NoNameGiven: The striking worker who narrates the film is never named,even when she appears on camera.
* TalkingHeads: Some of the strikers are interviewed on camera.
* TitleDrop: From the chant of the workers as the cops are bearing down on them.
--> "I may be black, but I am somebody! I may be poor, but I am somebody!"