Malcolm X Chapter 2

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In the autobiography of Malcolm X, the life of one of this nation's most notorious activists is explained in a depth that very few people have had the privilege of experiencing before. The author shows all the factors went into play to make Malcolm X the man he was. When reading the text, the reader begins to feel the passion and fire that X had inside himself. The general idea and direction of the story is made clear on the first page of the book. The story begins with a story from before Malcolm was born. He tells a story of a time when the Ku Klux Klan harassed his mother when then was pregnant with him and bared three children. The Klansmen were searching for Malcolm's father, a free lance preacher of Garvinism. He also tells of how his light skin complexion was derived from a white man who had raped his grandmother, he says that he had at one time seen his light skin as a a status symbol but later "hated every drop of that rapists blood" inside him. The first chapter generally shows how harsh and full of heartache his childhood life was due to the white people of his time. In chapter 2, the reader learns of how smart, likable, and Malcolm was while he was in school. The reader also learns of Malcolm's want for the city life. He found it hard to describe …show more content…

The author's use of slang further advances the vision of how Malcolm was and how loose and lay back the black community was. When Malcolm first attempts to dive into the Boston lifestyle he's still a little stiff and "Hick"-like, but he eventually learned to dance at the parties he attended and this contribute to the beauty in thy a man finally learns, after leaning on the wall at parties, that he can dance and he actually finds it very entertaining. The moment described in the text also contributes to power in that black people are natural born dancers and are naturally fun

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