Segregation in Separate Pasts by Melton AlonzaMcLaurin

592 Words2 Pages

In his novel, “Separate Pasts,” McLaurin recollects memories and interactions from his earlier years with the black community he, as a white male, grew up with. This book illuminates the realities of segregation in the United States by showing the real discrimination and separation of races in the 1950s in the town Wade. The first person to truly sway the narrator’s racial interpretations was an old friend, Bobo. Throughout the beginning of the novel, McLaurin emphasizes how frequently interracial encounters occurred and how the narrator reacted to them. In “Separate Pasts,” the narrator describes an event in which he licked a needle that his playmate Bobo, the black boy who lived behind the narrator’s grandfather’s store, had already previously licked. “A split second after placing the needle in [his] mouth, [he] was jolted by one of the most shattering emotional experiences of [his] young life. Instantaneously an awareness of the shared racial prejudices of generations of white society coursed through every nerve in [his] body” (37). Once he makes this realization, the narrator gai...

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