Racism In The Secret Life Of Bees By Sue Monk Kidd

1280 Words3 Pages

Racism has been around since humans first walked this planet, it would seem that over the thousands of years humans have had to develop morals and socially acceptable behaviors that something as shallow as racism would be entirely abolished but that is not the case. In the novel The Secret Life of Bees, written by author Sue Monk Kidd, the idea of racism is a constant struggle for fourteen year old Lily Owens as she embarks on a journey to find who she really is. 1964 is a difficult time for the Civil Rights movement. The conflicting tug of war between the political strides for the cause and the tension growing in prejudice southerners. The Civil Rights act of 1964 had just been signed into law by president John F. Kennedy, making sure
The segregation in the southern states is very prominent during that time period. For instance, Lily’s housekeeper Rosaleen could not live in the same house as Lily, nor could she worship in the same church. Lily finally had enough of her abusive father T.Ray and decided to run away along with their housekeeper Rosaleen who she broke out of jail. The only place she desired to go was the town written on one of her mother’s pictures. On the back of a photograph of a black version of Mary Lily’s mother had written the town Tiburon. Lily and Rosaleen arrive at the outskirts of Tiburon, after a combination of hitchhiking and walking, hungry and tired. As Lily shopped in a convenience store for lunch she noticed a jar of honey with the picture of the same black Mary as her mother’s picture. The store clerk points them in the right direction and they end up at the Botwright's house. As she is conversing with August Botwright Lily notices something peculiar. As she lies on her cot she thinks to herself; “T. Ray did not think colored women were smart. Since I want to tell the whole truth, which means the worst parts, I thought they could be smart, but not as smart as me, me being white. Lying on the cot in the honey house, though, all I could think was August is so intelligent, so cultured, and I was surprised by this.” (Kidd.78). Meeting and interacting with August depicts how much involuntary prejudice she had inside of her that she was not previously aware of. Lily used this experience to learn how you can’t judge a person based off their race and made herself rethink her thoughts on African-American people. Lily’s first meeting August contributes to the theme of not judging people based off of prejudice because August disproves Lily’s stereotype that African-Americans couldn’t be as smart as

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