Rose For Emily Racism

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William Faulkner’s, “A Rose for Emily” is a story illustrating a womans headstrong resistance to change, and her strives to keep former times alive. Miss Emily’s actions demonstrate the dangers of refusing to accept change, and the consequences of not letting go of the past. Racism may often bygone, but in the deep south, it is not uncommon to encounter. Just as Emily clung to her past and ultimately to her own demise, modern day racism clings to outdated, traditionalistic views; acting as a barrier from the progression and improvements that have come with time.
In the opening of the story, the narrator describes Emily’s residence. A once flourishing area full of beautiful elite homes is now a run-down industrial part of town with “garages and cotton-gins” that have ruined any trace of an attractive neighborhood (Faulkner 649). The only house left is Emily’s rotting white dwelling. What used to be a charming home, turned into an “eyesore among eyesores” that the city dreaded over time (649). This house and neighborhood reflects the transformation of racism overtime. What used to be an ideal that a large majority of the country believed, the elite and the leaders, is now only a minority belief that holds steadfast in those who believe it. And just as the town became ashamed of Emily’s old house, racism can be an embarrassment to those who are not racist. Just as Emily stuck to her decaying house, racism sticks to decaying, outdated beliefs of which the majority have evolved from with time.
When Emily’s father died, he left her no money, only the house. The mayor pitied her situation and allowed her a tax exemption. To make Emily feel better about receiving this exemption, he made up an excuse that her father had loaned money to...

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... openly discuss racism and racial biases on an everyday basis, it might be easier to come to terms with why racism still exists, and ways to extinguish it.
Emily’s desperate grasp on the past may have provided her some sort of satisfying complacency, which is not a hard concept to understand. It can be easier to fall back into familiar ways. However, did Emily’s severe nostalgia and forceful attempts to stay in the past really give her more comfort? She ended up hoarding a past lovers rotting corpse in her basement, and snuggling with it. Discussing racism and being open with beliefs may be very uncomfortable and awkward, but it is better than ignoring the archaic beliefs that are unwelcome, yet still exist, in modern times. If anything that riles up inconvenient emotions is swept under the rug, than process will be nonexistent, and racism may linger indefinitely.

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