The meaning behind Kenji Yoshino's statement that "the mainstream is a myth" is that America was built to not have one type of main group or culture but rather have a constantly changing set of beliefs and customs to fit all who live in the country. Yoshino's statement is based on the fact that the United States has had many different "identities" as our country has progressed. Multiple waves of immigration put different faces on what a mainstream American was supposed to look like, so there really is no one permanent set look, act, or feeling of a person who is considered "mainstream." Also, individuals can take upon multiple personalities/identities which can add to the lack of one true identity.
Yoshino is quite credible due to the fact that his personal beliefs and actions would not be considered mainstream and he has suffered from the consequences described in his writings.
FREE PHILTHY RICH!!!!!
FREE BIG LURCH!!!!!
FREE MYSTIKAL!!!!!
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Sunday, November 15, 2009
Studddds
The story of C.P. Ellis is a story of reconciliation and redemption that sticks out like a sore thumb in the society from which Ellis came due to his willingness to change himself. Ellis used his natural human ability to reason in a way that none of his family or friends ever would, and even more importantly acted upon that reasoning. However, I don't believe his method of change necessarily can translate to a total overcoming of racial and other types of misunderstanding. This is because his change of heart was more of an internal decision. The vast majority of bigots and racists in America do not have or refuse to acknowledge the existence of an ethical conscience about race. Therefore an internal change would almost be impossible and outside forces would have to come into play in order to have that type of effect on the people in question. However, Ellis's story is definitely credible due to the fact that he lived through a time where he actually associated with people who hate others more than any other group in the country and experienced things with them that set his story apart from most others.
Wednesday, November 11, 2009
Freedumb
Linda was able to finally escape to the north through the help of her friend Peter. At first when he offered her safe passage to the North, she turned him down due to the killing of a fugitive slave in the recent past that had deeply frightened her grandmother. She instead has Peter take her fugitive friend Fanny to the boat with him. However, eventually her grandmother relented, and Linda joined Fanny on the boat to Philadelphia to begin a new life in a free northern state. This does not end her troubles with the Flint family, who continued to pursue Linda to bring her back home until well after the death of Dr. Flint, but this gave Linda her first experience working for herself and gave a glimpse of what it was like to truly be without a master. The one thing that did upset her about this freedom was the fact that she was never able to see her grandmother while they were both free women even though they both died free.
FREE PHILTHY RICH!!!!!
FREE PHILTHY RICH!!!!!
Monday, November 9, 2009
Ahnestee phur Kredibyllitee
"And I was so selfish. I thought more of what I had lost, than of what my brother had gained. A new anxiety began to trouble me." In this passage, Linda is referencing the escape of her brother from the friendly captivity, yet captivity nevertheless, of Mr. Sands. Linda's honesty is important in this passage due to the fact that William's escape does not necessarily please here even though he is free, because she found the relationship between her and her brother to be more important than the freedom of one party or the other. This is a fairly common notion in slave culture at the time: that the sense of community between all of the slaves on a certain plantation is more important than the rights of individual members of the group, something that would not be expected in a situation like theirs.
FREE PHILTHY RICH!!!
FREE PHILTHY RICH!!!
Sunday, November 8, 2009
Innsidence in the Lyph of a Slayv Gurlll
Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl has a certain raw energy to it that cannot be compared to any textbook reading I have done or any encyclopedia entry. This raw energy comes from the course, biting language used throughout the narrative. Without such verbage within the story, I think the story would be less captivating. What makes this so special is the rough texture that the dialogue creates. Slavery was not pretty, fluffy or clean, and the story comes off as a much better representation of real life slavery due to the language it uses. Also, I find this story to be more powerful because it is a true story and not a work of fiction. This is because the sheer fact that this particular story actually happened has a much stronger mental effect. Had this story been just a representation of something that may have happened on a plantation that really isn't based on an actual story, I would have taken the plot to a much less serious degree. However, because of the nature of this true story, I not only have really been absorbed into the story, but I also have taken its message much more seriously.
Free Big Lurch!
Free Big Lurch!
Tuesday, November 3, 2009
Let's talk about racism!
Due to my generally tranquil cheery nature, I tend to avoid confrontation of any kind, especially confrontations about something I hate talking about like race. However, I have been a witness to several different interactions involving heated discussions about whether or not someone has been acting "racist" by the way they have been talking or acting, and believe me, I'm happy I've stayed out of it up to this point. From what I have seen, really there is no winner in these kinds of discussions because the conversation eventually declines into a name-calling shouting match which is utterly useless. I find this disappointing because if there are ever true racial issues that arise in our society, they are almost impossible to discuss without America, the country that cried racist, flipping out and discrediting the real problems. I completely agree with Wachtel in that the word "racist" has totally lost its value because of its massive overuse. It is being used to describe things that should be labeled as prejudice, bias, bigotry, etc. I find it interesting how the misuse of language has actually desensitized the public to an issue that is largely important in today's society.
Free Big Lurch!
Free Big Lurch!
Monday, November 2, 2009
Soeshelyz8hun Prahsess
Vincent Parillo's Socialization Process is a process in which individuals acquire what they value, believe, and perceive of different groups of people, usually conforming to the beliefs of their parents or other major role models in youth. The youth in question usually has no other sources of alternatives to the beliefs of his/her parents, so their beliefs are usually accepted as the real ones from a very early age. I believe this process does instill beliefs just from looking at my childhood, and I don't think there is anything wrong with this. It is a parent's responsibility to teach their children wrong from right and how to treat other people. Had my parents been woman-hating white supremacists, I probably would have at least started out as one too! Parillo's socialization process definitely exists in our society, and a cycle of bigotry is created by parents producing hateful children, who then produce hateful children of there own and so on.
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