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Black Negro Essay Essay Research Paper In

Black Negro Essay Essay, Research Paper


In John Howard Griffin’s novel Black Like Me, Griffin travels through


many Southern American states, including Mississippi. While in


Mississippi Griffin experiences racial tension to a degree that he did


not expect. It is in Mississippi that he encounters racial


stereotypical views directed towards him, which causes him to realize


the extent of the racial prejudices that exist. Mississippi is where he


is finally able to understand the fellowship shared by many of the


Negroes of the 50’s, because of their shared experiences. Although


Griffin travels throughout the Southern States, the state of


Mississippi serves as a catalyst for the realization of what it is


truly like to be a Negro in 1959. Once in the state of Mississippi,


Griffin witnesses extreme racial tension, that he does not fully


expect. It is on the bus ride into Mississippi that Griffin first


experiences true racial cruelty from a resident of Mississippi.


It was late dusk when the bus pulled into some little


town


outside of Hatteisburg for a stop. “We get about ten minutes here,”


Bill said “let’s get off here and stretch our legs” The driver stood up


and announced “Ten minute rest stop,”. The whites rose and ambled off.


Bill and I led the Negroes toward the door. As soon as he saw us, the


driver blocked our way. Bill slipped under his arm and walked away.


“Hey boy where are you going?” the driver shouted at Bill while he


stretched his arms across the opening to prevent myself from stepping


down. I stood waiting. “Where do you think your going?” he asked, his


heavy cheeks quivering with each word. “I’d like to go to the rest


room.” I smiled and moved to step down. He tightened his grip on the


door. “Does your ticket say for you to get off here?” he asked. “No


sir, but the others…” “Then you just sit your ass down.” We turned


like a small herd of cattle and drifted back to our seats. The large


woman was apologetic, as though it embarrassed her for a stranger to


see Mississippi’s dirty linen.1(pg 63) Up to this point in the novel


Griffin experiences exactly what he expects to experience. He is


taunted with typical racial slurs, and other forms of hostility, which


he is able to brush off as meaningless ignorance. This bus driver is


denying the black customers the most basic of human needs. The bus


driver attempts to not only humiliate them by forcing them to defecate


and urinate in public on the bus, but the bus driver is also attempting


to show all of the white customers what savages that the blacks are.


Griffin never expects to receive anger and hate to this degree.


Everywhere that he goes in Mississippi is full of hatred, and spite.


As I walked down Mobile Street, a car full of white men


and


boys sped past. They yelled obscenities at me. A satsuma flew past my


head and broke against a building. The street was loud and raw, with


tension as thick as fog. I felt the insane terror of it. When I


entered the store of my second contact, we talked in low voices.


Another car roared down the street, and the street was suddenly


deserted of Negroes, but then we appeared shortly.2(Page 67) For the


first time while in Mississippi Griffin realizes that there are many


individuals, who, if given the chance, would kill him simply because he


is black. It is in Mississippi that he begins to identify with the


blacks and begins to fully see himself as a black. Had he stayed in the


more Northern states he probably would never have progressed to this


state of mind. Griffin begins to understand that part of the reason for


the hatred of blacks by many whites is because of the stereotypical


image of the Negro in the 50’s.


In Mississippi he confronts racial stereotypes directed towards


him that prompt him to realize how deeply rooted society’s


prejudices are. While trying to hitchhike through Mississippi


he encounters white men willing to pick him up only because of


their preconceived notions of Negroes.


I must have had a dozen rides that evening. They blear


into


a nightmare, the one scarcely distinguishable from the other. It


quickly became obvious why they picked me up. All but two picked me up


the way they would pick up a pornographic photograph or book-except


that this was verbal pornography. With a Negro, they assumed they need


give no semblance of self respect or respectability. The visual element


entered into it. All of the men showed morbid curiosity about the


sexual life of the Negro, and all had, at base, the same stereotyped


image of the Negro as an inexhaustible sex-machine with over-sized


genitals and vast store of experiences, immensely varied. They appeared


to think that the Negro has done all of those “special” things they


themselves have never dared to do.3(pg.85) Griffin finds that


hitchhiking at night through Mississippi is the best way to experience


the underlying stereotypes found throughout Mississippi. A man will


open up at night because it gives him an illusion of anonymity. Griffin


can’t conceive of how these men can have such distorted concepts of


another human being. It becomes obvious that the reason these men have


such little respect for the Negroes is because they have absolutely no


understanding of them. Griffin realizes that before his travels as a


Negro in Mississippi he too knew very little about them. The Negroes


cope with this hate based upon ignorance by relying on each other.


Griffin is able to conceive the strong bond between many


Negroes, because of experiences that some Negroes share, while


he is in Mississippi. While on the bus heading for Mississippi


he notices how black strangers become instant friends


As we drove more deeply into Mississippi, I noted that


the


Negro comforted and sought comfort from his own. In Mississippi


everyone who boarded the bus at the various little towns had a smile


and a greeting for everyone else. We felt strongly the need to


establish friendship as a buffer against the invisible threat. Like


shipwrecked people, we huddled together in a warmth and courtesy that


was pure and pathetic.4(pg.63) Griffin speaks of his experience on the


bus as though it is a battle zone because that is exactly what it is.


The blacks realize that the key to surviving is unity and finding


something positive in their situation. They each try to provide the


others with something to be happy about and something to be grateful


for. The blacks try to counter the hate and hostility that they


encounter with warmth and kindness toward one another. Griffin can not


understand this bond until he is in a situation where he is looking for


kindness as much as the Negroes around him. Mississippi is where


Griffin learns to not only act as a black, but also feel their pain as


only a black can do.


Griffin travels throughout the Southern States but his


experience as a black in Mississippi serves as an awakening for


him to the understanding of what being a black man in 1959


entails. While in Mississippi he witnesses extreme racial


tension, which he had no idea existed until his visit to


Mississippi. It is in Mississippi that he is the victim of


racial stereotypes causing him to realize the extent of the


racial prejudices towards Negroes. Griffin is finally able to


understand the bond shared between many of the Negroes of the


time, while traveling through Mississippi. Until the novel


Black Like Me, the state of Mississippi adamantly denied that


it had any racial problems, after the novel was released


Mississippi and the world had to come to the realization that


their were serious problems in the way that blacks were being


treated. This novel is just as horrific to readers in the 90’s


as it was in the 50’s, but while the 90’s audience is convinced


that they have escaped the problem of racism, this


Bibliography Griffin, John Howard. Black Like Me. Sepia Publishing


Company. New York. 1960. *All subsequent entries are from this


source*


Endnotes 1. John Howard Griffin. Black Like Me. Sepia Publishing


Company. New York. 1960. *All subsequent entries are from this


source*


326



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