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Analysis Of Brent Staples 's ' Black Men Of Public Spaces ' And Issa Rae ' The Struggle

Decent Essays

Elise Barnhart English 1010-12 Comparative Writing 30 October 2017
Comparison Analysis of
Brent Staples’s “Black Men in Public Spaces” and Issa Rae “The Struggle”
Staple’s “Black Men in Public Spaces” and Rae’s “The Struggle” address misperceptions with ethnicity. Staples and Rae share similar circumstances making it easy to understand each viewpoint. Culture settings and gender define the authors’ differences. Both essays give the readers different perceptions of African Americans’ lives.
Staples starts the essay writing about how his skin color has a negative change on the public perspective. “Black Men in Public Spaces,” written in December 1986 by Brent Staples, tells about his life in Illinois as a frequent “night walker.” He starts …show more content…

Staples finds that his race and his gender play an enormous role on how the public views him. Although Brent has never been in a fight, his gender makes him a threat. Individuals make it public that a Black man frightens them. They do this by locking their car doors as he walks by, or by switching direction of their walking path as he approaches. Women feel defensive about men by showing signs such things as grabbing a purse across their chest, or in a sense bracing themselves for a fight (149). Society fearing a Black man never stopped Brent from his walks after sunset. Being male and walking at night makes the community uncomfortable. Brent learned how to screen out individuals to avoid trouble. He learned to ignore the signs people show when they get uncomfortable around him. Continuous fear on public faces has grown on Brent and he has learned to smooth out his rage. He goes out of his way to make others comfortable by leaving a gracious amount of space between him and a stranger on the subway. Staples even takes precautions to make strangers not feel followed. Whistling helps him reduce the tension between himself and the people of Chicago when he goes on his night walks.
Furthermore, this essay gives a perspective on what a Black man goes through. Brent wanted to enlighten his readers about daily life as an African American man. This meant explaining his view of the public from his perspective. By bringing these issues to light, he
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