Fear In Robert Coates's Between The World And Me

1754 Words4 Pages

2. Fear is palpably described in the book’s opening section and shapes much of Coates’s sense of himself and the world. “When I was your age,” Coates writes to his son, “the only people I knew were black, and all of them were powerfully, adamantly, dangerously afraid.” How did this far inform and distort Coates’s life and way of looking at the world? Is this kind of fear inevitable? Can you relate to his experience? Why or why not? Reading Between the World and Me gave me some level of insight as to what it means to be black. Coates described the fear of the police, the legislature, and the white that enveloped his community. He described how fear led to parents breaking children with sticks and belts until these kids shared the inherent …show more content…

The author is a black man not a black woman; he lacks the ability to describe the depth of a black woman’s situation. This book is specifically addresses the issue of black disenfranchisement - an issue that is pertinent to both genders of African Americans. Coates chooses to address his views from a personal perspective. Also, Coates did include notable stories of black woman throughout the text.There are surrounding black female figures in his life that he does intimately describe. He speaks of his first girlfriend at the Mecca and how she introduces him to love. He speaks of his own wife and the wife of Prince Jones. The most prominent female figure in this book is in fact the mother of Prince Jones,who is described in a highly positive manner: “And when Dr.Jones described her motive for escaping the dearth that marked her sharecropper life of her father … she remembered herself saying, ”I’m not going to live like this,” I saw the iron in her eyes …” Coates describes Princes mother as a strong and perseverant mother. He goes on to describe her journey towards becoming a radiologist, and her excellent care taking of her son, Prince. Coates devoted a separate section of the book describing resilience of this woman. Coates is not obligated to speak of black woman; however, he does choose to include the powerful story of

Open Document