Contrasting Realities: Understanding Racial Disparities

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“I would have you be a conscious citizen of this terrible and beautiful world” (Coates). Although a very poetic excerpt from Ta-Nehisi Coates’ Between the World and Me, the line is also a poignant view point the writer has about the world in which he and his son live. Coates writes to his fifteen year old son in Between the World and Me about the world in which they both live. Coates wants his son to be “conscious” of the unfair life he will live and the struggles he will have to go through to survive simply because he is black. Alice Goffman’s On the Run and W.E.B. DuBois’ The Philadelphia Negro show an extremely similar life for the black communities studied by the ethnographers as they are a more “terrible” world to live in. Both communities …show more content…

Strangers were constantly in the home, parents were always away making money to keep the family alive, and children were left alone or with the strangers. Goffman explains to the readers how the black community of Sixth Street find ways of making their legal troubles into resources. One way stated was “using the bail office as a bank”; “After a man’s trial ends, he or his family are entitled to 80 percent of the bail they put up for his release…instead of recovering bail money right away, people sometimes leave it at the bail office until they have a particular need for it” (Goffman 95). Many of the black men then use this money for their family, whether they can be there or not. Chuck once again provides an excellent example of this as he used the bail office as a way to support his girlfriend and child. In Dubois’ study, many of the parents in the community were forced to both house strangers to reduce the amount of rent they owed and also leave their children home alone or with strangers so they could earn money from their jobs; “The lodgers are often waiters, who are at home between meals, at the very hours when the housewife is off at work, and growing daughters are thus left unprotected” (DuBois 194). DuBois then goes on to say that the privacy of family is destroyed by taking strangers into the home; however, this …show more content…

Both show just how terrible and unfair the world truly is based on the color of your skin. However; both differ from Coates’ Between the World and Me as they have a more positive outlook on the future. Goffman and Dubois believe a change will and needs to come in order to stop this unfair treatment and racism while Coates’ simply states that his son must find a way to survive with the odds stacked against him. The world for the black community is a “terrible” place where they have already been given an unfair disadvantage solely based on their skin color. While I agree, one should be “conscious” of this and find a way to survive, I do not agree that just allowing it to happen and not fighting to end this prejudice is the right way to go about the overall

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