Analysis Of Black Like Me By John Howard Griffin

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John Howard Griffin was an American Journalist who wrote mostly about racial equality. He is devoted to the problem of racial justice and confused about him being a white man trying to understand the experience of living like a black man. In this book, “Black like Me” Griffin took an essential move and went to a professional doctor to get his skin changed to black for a short period of time. Throughout this book, he is trying to understand living like a black man, he wants to find discrimination, struggle, and injustice, but he is appalled at the duration of it. Griffin travels to New Orleans to live as a black man and explore the black neighborhoods. He begins with describing how every time he goes somewhere, he come across problems and insults. …show more content…

In Mississippi he sees a jury that did not want to give a black man trail before they murdered him. Griffin feels put down and worn out, he contacts his white friend P.D. East, which is a newspaperman who is against racism. Griffin talks to his friend East to discuss how racial prejudice has corrupted the south. Griffin is motivated and leaves for walk throughout Alabama and Mississippi. He treasures that reputation for blacks are astounding, and that black neighborhoods seem trash and ruin. Griffin even felt as a black man would feel, embarrassment and impracticable, after only being black for a few weeks. He presents how the Montgomery, black community is filled with dedication and energy from Martin Luther King Jr. speeches and him being a leader. Griffin felt so destroyed and dead living his life as a black man that he stopped taking his medication to turn his skin color back white. John Howard Griffin’s “Black like Me” is a great story because he put his self in a black person’s perspective to experience the struggle of the African American culture and establishes many …show more content…

Being black at that time was very dangerous. He had a chance of getting hung by his own race, torched, or in slaved. There were not many white people who understood a black’s man life. Griffin’s color change definitely grabbed my attention and I am pretty sure many other African Americans because this is our life he is living and learning about. If other Whites would experience our life like he did, racism would have probably not exist. “For so long as we condone injustice by a small but powerful group, we condone the destruction of all social stability, all real peace, all trust in man’s good intentions toward his fellow

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