What Does Jim Crow South As A Black Person Say About Racism

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Lessons Derived from Life in the Jim Crow South What does life in the Jim Crow South as a Black person say about racism in America and it s detrimental impact on Black people? In order to answer this question, one would have to look into the essay “The Ethics of Jim Crow”, the poem “Between the World and Me”, and the memoir Black Boy, all written by Richard Wright. Wright is an American writer who, through his writing, protested white s treatment of Black people and illustrated just how severe racism is in America. The novel, Black Boy depicts what life was like for Richard, as a Black person in the Jim Crow South, growing up in poverty that made it difficult to escape the south. He grew up in the “white world”, without a father, his single …show more content…

I could not make subservience an automatic part of my behavior. I had to feel and think about each tiny item of racial experience [.] While standing before a white man I had to figure out how to perform each act and how to say each word”. This was the mindset every Black person in the south had to procure in order to survive in the south, to keep a job, to keep out of jail, to keep from being hurt, and to keep their …show more content…

By pretending to drop his packages, he avoids having to interact with the white man, avoids thanking him and avoids smiling at him. After living in the South for years, Richard had to learn to think quickly and cleverly on his feet when around white people. Black people in the Jim Crow south had to literally survive, they were considered lucky if a white person let them keep their

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