Brent Staples

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In “Just Walk On By: A Black Man Ponders His Power to Alter Public Space,” by Brent Staples has a different perspective of the people who is discriminated against by their appearance. This short story gives the audience an overview of a young African American male who is categorized as a criminal. Although, Staples was discriminated against he sees the perspectives of White Americans’, and tries to go out of his way to ease their concerns. Staples created this short story to give people an outlook of his life with the color of his skin. Staples accomplishes this through figures of speech such as Point of View, Hyperbole, and Idioms. Staples writes his short story through first person to connect with the audience, to give his feedback on the …show more content…

This device was not only used to exaggerate, but to get the point across for the readers. He gets one of those many points across by exaggerating how the women walk through the streets at night, “They seem to set their faces on neutral and, with their purse straps strung across their chests bandolier style, they forge ahead as though bracing themselves against being tackled” (1). As women walk down the street they don’t really expect a random person to tackle them, but they portrait the women as though they have an attitude. Staples gives his audience this description to present the idea that African American males are the reason why they walk as if they are ready for an attack. As we continue to read he uses Hyperbole to see inside the eyes of not only the victim, but the ‘attacker’ and how it feels to be counted as an enemy, rather than, a regular person. “Yet these truths are no solace against the kind of alienation that comes of being ever the suspect, against being set apart, a fearsome entity with whom pedestrians avoid making eye contact” (1). Staples uses “entity” and “alienation” to describe the night walkers as if they were out of this world, and everyone that walks past them fears them for that reason. Staples not only uses hyperboles for exaggerations, but to give his reader a small representation of how he feels being in the place of the

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