Kathryn Stockett's The Help

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If you had a chance at changing history, would you take it? In the book “The Help” Kathryn Stockett writes about the struggles African American help go through on a daily basis. By the courage of an inexperienced journalist and an African American housemaid, a light is shined on the dark secrets of the racial injustices in the Jim Crow South. Kathryn Stockett has written a historically accurate book with “The Help” as she has conflicts, settings, and characteristics that represent the social and racial inequalities of that time period. The conflict of segregation and inequality between races in the southern U.S. during the 1960s is accurately portrayed in “The Help”. Public segregation played a huge role in the social and racial inequalities involving African Americans. African Americans were excluded from public bathroom, libraries, hotels, restaurants, schools, and were forced to occupy separate sections in vehicles of public transportation. “I want to yell so loud that Baby Girl can hear me that dirty ain't a color, disease ain't the Negro side of town. I want to stop that moment from coming – and it …show more content…

Black maids often developed intimate relationships with the white families they cared for by the simple nature of their work. “I just want to show Constantine’s love for me began with missing her own child. Perhaps that’s what made it so unique, so deep. It didn’t matter that I was white. While she was wanting her own daughter back, I was longing for a mother not to be disappointed in me.” Racist whites were characterized well in the novel. For instance, separate bathrooms were strongly suggested for African American maids because whites believed that all African Americans were dirty and disease ridden. “All these houses they’re building without maid’s quarters? It’s just plain dangerous. Everybody knows they carry different kinds of diseases than we

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