Analysis Of Honky By Dalton Conley

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In Dalton Conley’s memoir “Honky”, written in 2000, Conley talks about his experience of switching schools to a primarily white elementary school. He discusses the major differences between his prior, very diverse school and his new, primarily caucasian school. He focuses on the main topics of race and class, and how they enhanced the differences between these two schools. Conley focuses on race in his article as a main concept of causing the severe differences between the two schools. Conley focuses on race as being a “socially constructed categorization of humans based on phenotypical characteristics perceived to be shared by a group, which creates relationships of privilege and oppression” (Barnes 2016). Race is often forced upon people, …show more content…

Class is a “relational social categorization based on economic, cultural, and social characteristics” (Barnes 2016) this includes a person’s: income and wealth, networks and connections, cultural knowledge, and social status. When a person has a high social status, that often means that they have more power in society compared to a person who is in a lower social class than they. A good example of class and how it separates the lower classes from the higher classes are private schools. Private schools are often very expensive and people who are in lower class systems often cannot afford to send their kids their, causing an even larger gap between classes. In Conley’s memoir, with him switching schools from a public, working class school to a private, middle class school shows how the schools that people go to can greatly effect their …show more content…

Through reading his memoirs I came to this decision because, at his school in Greenwich Village, there were students of different races that attended, however not many, but all students were either in the middle or upper classes. This affected Conley the most because the students at his new school stimulated him and his education through the knowledge that their parents gave to them because they were all educated and promoted higher learning. The installment of Conley in the middle class caused him to focus on what he truly enjoyed learning and helped him be included in different groups at school and make more friends than he did at his first school. In conclusion, in Conley’s memoir he focuses on his experience of switching schools, while in the third grade, from a predominantly African American and Latino school to a predominantly caucasian elementary school. His memoir focuses on the differences in his experiences at each school and how race and class further separated the similarities between his two schools. Conley focuses equally on race and class and how they both influenced and shaped his life, but class was the primary influence on Conley’s

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