The Autobiography Of Miss Jane Pittman Analysis

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Ernest J. Gaines stated, “That 's man 's way. To prove something. Day in, day out he must prove he is a man...” Gaines states this quote from his novel The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman, which he publishes in 1971 just a few years after the ending of The Civil Rights Movement. The Civil Rights Movement, also known as “The African American Civil Rights Movement”, was a battle started between the society and the African-American race for racial equality, acceptance, and respect as it was given to the Whites. However, the ongoing battle for blacks to obtain these expectations from society lasted for years, and would often force some blacks to separate themselves from the entire race and propose their worthiness of respect and manhood to society by proving and earning it as an individual instead of waiting for it to be handed to the entire race. …show more content…

However, it also influence and force the individual strategies that he partakes to prove his worthiness as a black man to society. His individual actions to stand on his own and prove his value correlates with his statement that explains that man must prove he is a man. Understanding the meaning and the reasoning of his quote and having knowledge about The Civil Rights Movement in which around the time his novel, Catherine Carmier was written and publish, it relates and illustrates influence to the similar demonstrations that were display within the novel by the two African American characters Raoul, and Jackson, whom independently confronts society, their community, and each other of their worthiness of manhood and respect while coexisting with the Cajuns and living in a society that still treats the whites as supremacy over all

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