In Trading Places, structural disadvantage is depicted by the origins of both Louis and Billy. Louis is a third generation Harvard graduate who has never done manual labor in his life. On the contrary, Billy was born into a poor, broken home where they had to struggle to survive. Due to structural disadvantage, African Americans are not given the same opportunities as their white counterparts. It is also proven that once someone is born into a social class, it is very likely that they will stay in the same social class for their entire lives. This is one of the reasons that structural disadvantage continues to exist to this day. African Americans also receive less funding to schools that have a high percentage of black students. On average the college enrollment rate for black students is 10 to 15 percent less than a white students. With more white students attending schooling, more white students are moving up social classes causing structural disadvantage to continue. Trading Places is an extremely funny movie about the switching lives of a successful brokerage manager and a deadbeat homeless man. However, even though the movie ends with billy becoming rich, the film still reinforces racism in ways such as racist aesthetic, racial stereotypes, and structural disadvantage. Trading Places would be an amazing movie if it did not reinforce many disturbing racist
In Trading Places, structural disadvantage is depicted by the origins of both Louis and Billy. Louis is a third generation Harvard graduate who has never done manual labor in his life. On the contrary, Billy was born into a poor, broken home where they had to struggle to survive. Due to structural disadvantage, African Americans are not given the same opportunities as their white counterparts. It is also proven that once someone is born into a social class, it is very likely that they will stay in the same social class for their entire lives. This is one of the reasons that structural disadvantage continues to exist to this day. African Americans also receive less funding to schools that have a high percentage of black students. On average the college enrollment rate for black students is 10 to 15 percent less than a white students. With more white students attending schooling, more white students are moving up social classes causing structural disadvantage to continue. Trading Places is an extremely funny movie about the switching lives of a successful brokerage manager and a deadbeat homeless man. However, even though the movie ends with billy becoming rich, the film still reinforces racism in ways such as racist aesthetic, racial stereotypes, and structural disadvantage. Trading Places would be an amazing movie if it did not reinforce many disturbing racist