John Griffin Black Like Me Sparknotes

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John Howard Griffin was an American author, born in Dallas, Texas, that was best known for addressing racial inequality in his writings. One of his most controversial works was “Black Like Me.” In his book, he underwent a social experiment wherein he tried to make the impression he was an African American by temporarily dying his skin black and a dermatological medical procedure and living with African Americans sometime in 1959. His goal was to assess and determine the attitudes of white Americans toward African Americans in various Southern states in America including New Orleans (Louisiana), Alabama, Mississippi, and Georgia. Among his known characteristics, Griffin is often regarded as a committed man that advocated racial justice. Out …show more content…

The most difficult experience that Griffin must have faced as a black man would have to be the fact that he was a white American posing as a black American at a time when prejudice and racist discrimination against African Americans were prevalent. Through his book, he shares how he expected to experience oppression, difficulties, and prejudice (racism) but he was surprised to find the real gravity and extent of the problem. He was called insulting words like “nigger” and the hate stare. He also discovered how it seemed unattainable to find any job due to the integration of racial prejudice in the Southern states. In relation, what probably angered and depressed Griffin the most would have to be his discovery of the extent of racism. It appeared that white Southern men deeply believe blacks were incapable of being morally refined, loyal, or decent and polite. For an actual white American, Griffin was clearly appalled to find the degree to which prejudice was imprinted in the Southern culture. On the other hand, Griffin experienced the courtesy of African Americans as they saw him as one of them. Soon, he understood the predicaments and depressive state of African Americans and how white Americans misunderstood people of …show more content…

He was trying to look for a job and he chanced upon a plant. Suddenly, one of the plant foremen declared he was slowly clearing out African Americans who had jobs at the plant. The foreman tried to discourage Griffin from applying while claiming there was no use to try there. He also professed how he aimed to remove all blacks from their jobs until the only ones left would be jobs that white Americans would never have. Griffin even asked how they will live, to which the foreman answered that they were doing their “damndest to drive” every African American out of their state (Griffin, 94). Such disheartening experience highlight the kind of hatred and violence black Americans experienced at the hands of men who believed White

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