Wednesday, November 18, 2015

Assimilation within Literary Works

Assimilation: The state of being absorbed into something, experience, information, etc or absorbing one cultural within another cultural group.

Do you ever think about how you walk around school and find that everyone either talks the same or dresses the same? Would that be considered assimilation? Absorbed by the people around you, something or being absorbed by the information you are being fed. Assimilation can be both positive and negative. Positive when the information and experiences are positive but vice versa when it’s understood the wrong way.
I do not believe in religion, I never really did. Truthfully because I did not understand how people worshipped a different God or figure, that always figured. Therefore, I am unique, I am not religious however, I am a firm believer and follower of Christ. Anyone can take that information and look at me differently because I do not believe in religion. That is assimilation in a negative way.

Invisible Man identifies a character that is engrossed into a community where he goes through the state of assimilation. Establishing that he is invisible reveals that he would not encounter anyone or be involved in any experiences that would make him different. When the narrator joins the Brotherhood, they took his experiences and qualities and absorbed him into their ‘mastermind’. Giving speeches and fleeing the city to support causes that had nothing to do with the Brotherhood. Potentially blinding him into believing that the Brotherhood is for the better. What they needed was more black men so the community would always be on their side. Which relates back to how Dr.Bledsoe his masked in the best judgement of white people instead of standing up for his own race. Seems as though everyone in this novel was assimilated into the white world and believing that they have no important role in it because they are black. This brings up the theme colliding cultures because assimilating is the state of absorbing one cultural within another culture.



Being assimilated into a white community is also revealed in Native Son. I feel as though nobody really caught on to how the newspaper media played an important role in Bigger’s demise. Yes, he was already doomed from the beginning, but doesn’t it seem as though the newspaper media blew things out of proportion? Which led to the point where the justice system was assimilated into the opinion of the media instead of their own evidence and judgement.  During the inquest of Bigger Thomas, the news reports on what happens during the inquest and they discuss his upbringing down South.  The purpose of the article is to strike fear in the readers that they should fear black people like Bigger Thomas.  The reporter quotes an editor of a southern newspaper who suggests “residential segregation is imperative…to keep them as much as possible out of direct contact with white women and lessens there attacks against them” (355). Bigger Thomas is used as an example to continue segregation based on race.  The killings suggest that black people should not encounter white people simply to keep peace.  Because Bigger killed a white woman, the black community is penalized for his actions. The newspaper judges Bigger before the trial begins making his situation worse.

Assimilation: The state of being absorbed into something, experience, information, etc or absorbing one cultural within another cultural group.

Monday, October 19, 2015

Literary Merit


Literary Merit: The quality shared by all works of fiction that are considered to have aesthetic value. The concept is considered criticized as being subjective since personal taste determine aesthetic value.

-Definition from College Board

To me I feel as though a literary merit is a novel that teaches us a lesson. Remember when we were in elementary school and at the end of the novel there was always a lesson or the moral of the novel? For instance, The Boy Who Cried Wolf--if you lie about needing help and when the time comes when you are in danger, help will not come. Then when we get older we read books like The Lord of the Flies--one still exist even though they were masked but an uncivilized society. We can always take a work of literature and relate back to real life situations that may relate to us.

The novel Black Boy depicts a character that is put into a society of racial inequality. The literary merit behind this book is how an individual survives in a society filled with prejudice and intolerance in the environment. To be completely honest, the narrator is a mischievous child who nobody likes to put up with. He went through a large amount of different jobs, his family members have a hard time dealing with him, and he constantly moves from household to household. Depicting that for him it's pretty hard to survive in any given environment. Living down south was not for him so he decided to find a better lifestyle up north. Finding that racism did not exist as much in the north than it did in the south. I would not say I personally learned a lesson from this novel but the overall lesson was basically survival of the fittest in a prejudice society.

Sunday, October 4, 2015

Blog to the World

I'm an athlete. I don't like to read. I barely ever want to eat and sleeping is so essential. But since I'm suppose to write about this blog instead of sleeping, I guess I'll do so.

The book I chose is Black Boy by Richard Wright. I didn't pick it for any particular reason but I don't regret picking it. Originally I was like "oh my goodness this book is going to be too long I really don't have time to be reading this" but, then I thought about the summer reading books and realized this book is a peace of cake. Personally, I like to read books that are based off of racial inequalities just so I can get a deeper feel for how people of my race lived in that time period. Seeing as I'm a lazy reader, I'll only read books that'll interest me and this book is giving me justice. 

My only goal for this blog is to make it everyone's favorite. I'm only kidding. I would like to develop my writing, take it to the next level. With the help of my peers, I feel as though different insight would further get me to the next level with writing. I don't want to be the basic writer and do what basic writers do. I want my writing to engage readers and really "ooo,ahh" the audience. 



- Kincaid E. McLaren