The Ethics Of Living Jim Crow Summary

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Richard Wrights “The Ethics of Living Jim Crow” provided me with an account of the daily struggles African American males faced during the time preceding the Civil War. Wright allowed the reader to travel with him as he was taught “The Ethics of Living Jim Crow”. The theme of inferiority can be viewed in “The Ethics of Living Jim Crow” through oppression, demoralization, and survival. In the South, the Jim Crow Laws were strictly enforced. At the focal point of the laws were blacks, specifically men were oppressed. Oppression begins mentally with the oppressed and the oppressor. Mental oppression was expressed though whites being viewed as being superior and keeping blacks in their place as being inferior to whites. As a child, Wright made …show more content…

In addition to the oppressive techniques that affected the black man psychologically, along with it came demoralization. Wright was taught by his mother from a young age that he was of no comparison to a white man, hence the quote “I was never, never under any conditions, to fight white folks again” (Wright 133). This resulted in Wright fearing whites. As not only a man, but a black man, being told this from a young age, made it difficult for Wright to assert his masculinity in given situations due to the constant reminder that he was to never fight with a white man be it verbally or physically. Also, as a reader, I considered the lack of male guidance that many black males lacked during this time due to extenuating circumstances, such as the father leaving to start working to later come back for his family, which in most cases left the children in the care of women. Males during this time had to figure things out on their own and rely on the men around them for guidance because their mothers could only guide them and provide insight to a certain point as they entered …show more content…

By allowing himself to be vulnerable to masking his identity, he was placed in the position to cope with his daily actions. Blacks use many coping mechanisms to survive with daily tasks they may face. For example, in James Baldwin’s “Notes of a Native Son”, his father harbored his anger of being a black man and as a result, the anger that was internalized aided in his death. The mental state of him being an inferior black man in society and having to please the white man daily made him feel like he was less than the man he truly was because he had to bow down to another man, a white man that he

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