The Myth Of Other Suns Summary

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After exceeding a decade of interviews and research that amassed over 1500 interviewees, Isabel Wilkerson published The Warmth of Other Suns: The Epic Story of America's Great Migration. This book cover a time period roughly spading from 1915 until Obama entered office, and tells the story of The Great Migration, where nearly six million African Americans fled the south between 1915 and 1970 in hopes of a better life. Wilkerson focuses on the risk people took to get what was promised in the Emancipation proclamation, along the way, she shows the triumphs and tragedies that came with taking those risk. After giving a background of what The Great Migration entailed, what it meant to those in the south, and what the outcome of north and westward …show more content…

The book gives a descriptive account of the events that were instrumental in starting The Great Migration, Wilkerson put an emphasis on the Civil War, she writes, “It grew out of the unmet promises made after the Civil War and, through the sheer weight of it, helped push the country toward the civil rights revolutions of the 1960s”(?). After giving the reader a detailed description of events that led up to the beginning of The Great Migration, Wilkerson successfully shows The Great Migration through the eyes of three people who migrated out of the Jim Crow South. By using characters from different social classes, educational backgrounds, and career paths, a holistic story is told through person accounts. Throughout the book, the reader beings to realize that the oppression of the south had a way of affecting everyone who resided their. Innocent men were beaten within inches of death because of racial hatred, those who demanded better conditions were chased away or murdered by lynch mobs, and those who had the credentials to demand better pay were limited by their ability to work because of race. Readers eventually come to see that although the rest of the United States was not perfect, the opportunities for African Americans outside of the Jim Crow South were

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