Richard Wright was born after the Civil War, but before the Civil Rights Movement. Wright spoke out about the problems that he and other black people faced through his writing. Black Boy, his autobiography, was about the hardships he faced growing up as a black boy in America what happened to the people around him. If he were to write a novel titled Black Boy today, he would write about police brutality towards black people, how white people treat white privilege, and the “thuggification” of black people in the media.
In Ta-Nehisi Coates article, “Nonviolence as Compliance,” Coates argues that officials that are calling for calm at the Baltimore riots can’t offer rational justification for Freddie Gray 's death so …show more content…
She claims that she never distinguished how oblivious white people are towards these social constructs till she witnessed it firsthand through her three adopted black children. She develops this claim by first showing the microaggressions she notices such as strangers petting her daughters cornrows, watermelon jokes and assumptions about her child 's athletic abilities. She even points out that in one case a woman called her toddler son a “thug.” Lastly concluding that seeing her children encounter racism, judgement and discrimination solely based on their skin color has blossomed a deep empathy for people of color. Garlinghouse’s purpose is to show how even children have constant battles with racism daily in order for people to know that racism is alive today and it is time to recognize white privilege as a real problem. This work is significant because she needs other people to realize and recognize the struggles of black people how white privilege is influencing