The American Dream In Ta-Nehisi Coates's 'Between The World And Me'

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The American Dream, such a vague term, but a term that conjures so much hope. In his intellectual autobiography, Between the World and Me, Ta-Nehisi Coates redefines the term to set forth his ideas of inequality and injustice. To Coates, the Dream is unlike the optimistic promises that are publicized in the media as he chooses to define the terms in relation to discrimination in the African American community. Throughout his personal letter to his son, Coates rejects the idea of the Dream and explains it as another method of suppressing those of his race. As the idea of the Dream reoccurs throughout this piece, the audience further questions the value that Americans place on the trivial concept. Initially, Coates personifies the Dream as “treehouses and Cub Scouts” smelling like “peppermint” and tasting like “strawberry” (Coates 11) in order to mock the way society has illustrated the dream for generations. Comparing the Dream to …show more content…

He advises his son to “not struggle for the Dreamers. Hope for them. Pray for them, if you are so moved” (151). He characterizes the Dreamers as those who cannot see the entirety of the destruction going on around us in this country. The Dreamers only see the optimism, but cannot see the constraints around those who are unable to dream. To hope and pray for the Dreamers is to Coates, to hope and pray that others realize the superficiality of the Dream. He wishes to invoke a sense of responsibility not in the young African Americans looking for change, but in the Dreamers, to realize their faults and the faults they dose upon others. He believes that it is no longer about the struggle towards the Dream, as the Dream is unattainable, but to wait for the day that the Dreamers will have to “learn to struggle themselves” (151) and initiate a change in the

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