Comparison Of Si Sit In: How Four Friends Stood Up By Sitting Down

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Thesis: Sometimes people need to struggle/try harder before they get what they want. Have you ever asked your parents to buy you something and they said that you have to work to get it? After a couple hours, either you’ll get tired and give up, or you’ll continue to do whatever you need and get it. In both fiction and nonfiction even after this is twisted and turned, it can still be pointed out and seen. In Sit In: How Four Friends Stood Up by Sitting Down by Andrea Davis Pinkney, friends stage a peaceful protest to define racial inequality. In The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins, when a girl gets picked for the games, she thinks that what the Capitol does is wrong, so she tries to prove and rebell it. Both books, point out the way that people need to struggle for things-- even if they’re right--to get what they want. …show more content…

The college students sit at their local diner and ask for a simple order, “A donut and coffee, with cream on the side (3).” With the “WHITES ONLY” sign being put up around every corner of the diner, the waiters/waitresses ignore the group and continue to serve only the whites.The group is forced to fight through crucial hate from the mass around them. “As the sit-ins grew, angry people gave the students a big dose of hatred--served up hot and heaping. Coffee, poured down their backs. Milkshakes, flung in their faces. Pepper, thrown in their eyes. Ketchup--not on the fries, but dumped on their heads (19).” This shows the struggle that the African Americans faced because of what they wanted. Because the friends want to integrate and have equal rights, they continue to sit and await their orders with the challenges that come with them until their order is

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