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Popular culture depiction of racism
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It is all a game, the institutions that individuals live in and system they abide to is a game. One could assume their fate is determined by personal choices and opportunities, but there is more that comes to play, especially when one is black in America. The system is rigged against African Americans and in Topdog/Underdog, Suzan-Lori Parks uses her characters, Lincoln and Booth, to explain the unjust, racist system that puts down Black people. She uses a card game to explain how the system is unfair and how people fall into traps of the system, and at the end, implies that an unjust system can lead to violence. When it comes to the card game, Lincoln is the game master, the dealer. Parks uses him and his game to reference or be a reflection …show more content…
The illusion of freedom and self-determination is so strong because the dealer’s accomplices disguise themselves as regular people, when they are actually part of the trick. As Lincoln told Booth when he first started teaching him the game, “Everybody out there is part of the crowd. His crew is part of the crowd, he himself is part of the crowd” (Parks 73). The dealer, or the top-dog, and his crew is part of the target’s environment. They might be random strangers, but also people one would interact with every day. They could be a neighbor, a friend, and even a person’s own family, and within this book, one’s own brother. People who are not in on the game are helpless victims that fall trap in the system. Lincoln is the topdog in his little card game, and he plays his brother like how the system plays him. Although Lincoln plays the underdog as a black man in the work force, within the realm of the card game, he represents the …show more content…
Booth watches Lincoln for a while and Booth thinks he has it all figured out, but Lincoln comes in and tells him otherwise. Lincoln explains that “You wanna hustle 3-card monte, you gotta do it right, you gotta break it down. Practice it in smaller bits. Yr trying to do the whole things at once that’s why you keep fucking up” (Parks 16). Booth fails at being a new dealer because he tries to tackle the game as a whole when there are layers within the game. It is a complicated system that needs to be understood piece by piece. To bring this back to the bigger racist institution that puts down Black folks in America, the system is a system that is built upon generations and to think that it can be understood and controlled fully by just watching and learning is naïve, and Parks is saying that that is why people fail to bring down the system and make it work in their favor. The only way to tackle the system is to break it apart and work on it piece by piece, but this process is long and the victims cannot
Ghettos, low-riders, hip-hop, rap, drugs and crime, it has got to be a Black man right? Saggy pants, unintelligible language, lazy, and the lists continue to both stereotype and describe Blacks. Do Black Americans perpetuate their own discrimination? Are Black Americans creating their own low status in society? Black people around the world have been hypnotized into believing all their failures in life are due to discrimination, but are they correct? Blacks are often their own worst enemies, often the cause of their own disasters, and many don’t see that until it’s too late, if ever. Discrimination and prejudice are imposed upon Blacks, often because the culture they live in is not “acceptable” to the dominant society. On the other hand, an understandable reason for Blacks actions is often due to unattainable opportunities towards the American Dream.
McPhee begins his essay with the description of a turn in Monopoly. He then quickly movesto a description of a street (specifically Vermont Avenue) from the actualcity of Atlantic City. He continues in this fashion throughout the essay.As he moves from property to property in his game, he moves descriptivelyfrom street to street and from sector to sector in Atlantic City. McPheebrings in a bit of history as describes each "property" for the reader.From Anthony J. Drexel Biddle and the Brighton Hotel to changes that havetaken place concerningthe type of criminals held in the prison, McPheeoffers us a now and thencomparison throughout and all the while continuinghis game of Monopoly.
Just Mercy’s Bryan Stevenson exposes some of these disparities woven around his presentation of the Walter McMillian case, and the overrepresentation of African-American men in our criminal justice system. His accounts of actors in the criminal justice system such as Judge Robert E. Lee and the D.A. Tom Chapman who refused to open up the case or provide support regardless of the overwhelmingly amount of inconsistencies found in the case. The fact that there were instances where policemen paid people off to testify falsely against McMillian others on death row significantly supports this perpetuation of racism. For many of the people of color featured in Stevenson’s book, the justice system was unfair to them wrongfully or excessively punishing them for crimes both violent and nonviolent compared to their white counterparts. Racism towards those of color has caused a “lack of concern and responsiveness by police, prosecutors, and victims’ services providers” and ultimately leads to the mass incarceration of this population (Stevenson, 2014, p. 141). Moreover the lack of diversity within the jury system and those in power plays into the already existing racism. African-American men are quickly becoming disenfranchised in our country through such racist biases leading to over 1/3 of this population “missing” from the overall American population because they are within the criminal justice
People in America are not all seen as equal, and this is especially true when it comes to people of color. According to “Theories and Constructs of Race” by Linda Holtzman and Leon Sharpe: “The continuous racial targeting of people of color and the privileging of whites, along with the misinformation about race passed along from one generation to the next and reinforced through the media, has imbued people of all races with a distorted sense of personal and group identity” (Holtzman and Sharpe 604). This quote means that people of color are often targeted in a negative way, which shows that racism and discrimination is something that can be passed down or learned from the media. Today, there are people who still think minorities are inferior based on the color of their skin. “Theories and Constructs of Race” also mentions how from an early age, minorities become the target for racism, blame, and overall hatred. According to “Theories and Constructs of Race” by Linda Holtzman and Leon Sharpe: “The myth of racial inferiority and superiority has been upheld not only by physical violence and discriminatory policies but also by the psychological violence conveyed through stereotyping and racist messaging” (Holtzman and Sharpe 604). This quote means that minorities are constantly targeted both physically and psychologically, which shows that inequality is a “monster” due to the damage it causes to individuals on multiple levels. Racism can also lead to internalized racism, which causes individuals to adapt a self-deprecating attitude and engage in self-destructive behavior. Furthermore, hate, racism, and discrimination often result from people not understanding that not everyone is offered the same opportunities due to the lack of
A major theme in the novel is exposing Wall Streets greed and brutality. The Story begins with Solomon Brothers chairman John Gutfreund challenging board member John Meriwether to a game of Liars Poker, a card game, with one million dollars at stake. Meriwether raises his bet to ten million, setting the scene for the brutish and greed filled novel. Once at Solomon, Lewis is first placed in the training program on the forty-first floor. The training program, as well as the rest of the floor, is mostly comprised of white men in perpetual competition with each other. In the front row of the program are the attentive, nerdier trainees while the back row is described as rowdy and mischievous. The forty first floor was ruled by “The Law of the Jungle” where the traders beat down on the trainees, the back row trainees always stirred up trouble and the only focus was money. Good, bad or evil didn’t matter as long as it made the firm, and the traders, rich. The trading floor at Solomon Brot...
As Patrick Maley suggests, Booth is copiously aware that his is the underdog, which propels him into “a quest to become top dog,” consistently working on developing his skills at 3-card monte to become a notorious hustler like Link (187). Maley points out Booth’s complete understanding that Lincoln is keeping him from moving out of the position of the underdog; as Booth says, “here I am interested in an economic opportunity, willing to work hard […] and you standing in my way. YOU STANDING IN MY WAY, LINK!” (Parks 21). Even so, Booth is initially interested in merely working with Lincoln against the American Dream, hoping instead to be a hustling team, scamming others of their money to live a lavish, easy life. This is evident in the scene that Lincoln loses his impersonation gig; Booth attempts to comfort his brother, rather than relish watching Lincoln begin to lose his control, telling Link “Yr free at last! Now you can do anything you want. Yr not tied down by that job. You can-you can do something else. Something that pays better maybe” (62). Once Booth realizes that Lincoln is adamantly resolved to giving up the hustle and there is no chance that “big brother Link and little brother Booth” are going to “team up and do it together,” Booth becomes intent on switching the dynamics of their relationship by assuming the position of “topdog” (Parks 19). Interestingly, though, Booth turns to Lincoln, running to the “topdog” holding all the power in their relationship, for assistance in these endeavors; in his attempts to alter the power dynamics in his relationship with Lincoln, Booth has no other choice than to abide by the positions of “topdog” and “underdog” in relying on Lincoln to teach him the art of the
As presented in many fictional text such as Kindred, Wild Seed and The Appropropriation of a Culture “control” or “power” can be deemed the underlying influence to the concept of oppression and unjust treatment of others due to their race or social status. These fictional texts graphically detail the experiences of African Americans and how they came together as a community when facing the inevitable both in slavery and during the Jim Crow era. There are many other texts that describe the improper regulation of control and what can happen when one race or group has too much. One novel entitled Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston tells the story of a wife who was sentenced to prison after shooting her husband in self-defense after he had contracted rabies and turned violent. Another novel entitled Roll of Thunder Hear My Cry by Mildred D. Taylor details racism in America during the Great Depression (Goodreads) Despite the slavery era and modern day being two different periods of time, there are still some unresolved issues and situations in which revolve around the idea of racism and oppression. However, unlike back in the day African Americans are able to learn about their heritage and ancestors as well as receive an education so that they may acquired the knowledge necessary to diminish the destruction caused by oppression and dilute the poisonous effects of
...ith money on the floor and tell the blacks to get the money. The blacks dive on the rug, only to find that it is electrified. The whites push the blacks onto the rug so that the whites can laugh at the black people’s pain and suffering. This demonstrates the stereotype of whites in charge of blacks and blacks being submissive to the whites. The white people are forcing the blacks to do something for the whites’ entertainment. The narrator wants to overcome these stereotypes and have his own individual identity.
Many would argue that the reason why the incarceration rate for African Americans is sustainably higher compared to white American is because of economic situations, and because of past arrest patterns. While it is true that the economic opportunity someone has will affect their decisions, this argument doesn’t fully explain the real reason of why the rates are higher. To fully understand the reason why one must look back on America’s history and how African Americans were treated. The past arrest patterns do not explain why the gap continues to increase, however it is clear that the past arrest patterns is more an indicator of institutional racism that exists in this country. One study found that African Americans believe the reason for the high incarceration rates is becau...
Even though racism has always been a problem since the beginning of time, recently in the United States, there has been a rise in discrimination and violence has been directed towards the African American minority primarily from those in the white majority who believe they are more superior, especially in our criminal justice system. There are many different reasons for the ethnic disparities in the criminal justice system between the majority and the minority, but some key reasons are differential involvement, individual racism, and institutional racism to why racial disparities exist in
To look closely at many of the mechanisms in American society is to observe the contradiction between constitutional equality and equality in practice. Several of these contradictions exist in the realm of racial equality. For example, Black s often get dealt an unfair hand in the criminal justice system. In The Real War on Crime, Steven Donziger explains,
First, I would like to thank you for giving me an opportunity to present this pitch. Topdog/Underdog is a play by Suzan-Lori Parks that I would like for you to consider producing at the Voorhees Theater. In my pitch I have included a brief synopsis of the play, Theme of the play and how the production would help the fellow students. To further persuade you I have included a brief history of the past productions of the play, written review of different productions of the play, some casting choices as well as some comments from the Playwright herself regarding the Play. I hope by the end of this pitch I have persuaded you to bring Topdog/Underdog to Voorhees Theater at our very own City Tech College. So, without further a due let me begin.
Booth and Lincoln both search for an identity in their assertions of power. Booth tries emulating his brother’s power by aspiring to “throw the cards” and master the hustle in an attempt to establish his identity, as the “topdog” with power. Maley and Michael LeMahieu discuss the significance of Booth’s self-naming, dubbing himself “3-Card” as he embarks on his endeavor to unseat Lincoln from the position of the “topdog.” However, LeMahieu emphasizes the importance of Lincoln’s struggle to determine “what is,” to separate himself from the legacy of the Abraham Lincoln, the man he is named after and the man he impersonates for an honest living, an identity Link relies on to procure the salary that provides him with control and keeps him in the position of the “topdog.” Maley mentions that “Lincoln always retains power and control” by earning “the salary they share and, more importantly for this relationship, he [still] has the skill to run a successful three-card monte hustle” (187). At the beginning of Topdog/Underdog, on the surface level of the play, Lincoln has completely abandoned the hustle, yielding the control he possessed in tricking others through
During the confrontation during the poker game, which immediately ends it, readers are exposed to the reality of Stella and Stanley’s
When one has mastered the art of deception, one can almost do anything one wants. If one is also ruthless, one will become a dangerous person. In Roald Dahl’s “Man From the South”, Carlos, a man with a gambling addiction persuades an American sailor to bet on a game that Carlos will offer his Cadillac against the sailor’s little finger. Carlos bets that the sailor cannot ignite his cigarette lighter ten times in succession. Carlos almost wins the bet, and in a nick of time, Carlos’ companion reveals his trickery and his ruthlessness to collect fingers. Through his deception and ruthlessness, Carlos is able to make a game that will physically hurt the sailor. One must not be fooled but others appearance because people might have hidden intentions.