РефератыИностранный языкCoColored People Essay Research Paper Segregated Peace

Colored People Essay Research Paper Segregated Peace

Colored People Essay, Research Paper


Segregated Peace: an essay on Colored People


Integration was a main theme or topic in this memoir. It played an important role


in the time when Gates was growing up and had a big affect on him throughout his book.


Integration changed the way Gates viewed, whites, blacks, restaurants, hairstyles, church,


school, etc. He went from a conformist to a rebel to an Episcopal. His community changed


with him and the older generation of course did not take to integration as well as most of


the younger generation did. Integration was considered a good thing to most people and


others believed that Blacks had lost something through the whole ordeal. They believed


that they had lost the close knit family ties that segregation indirectly created. Gates sums


up the way the community felt about integration in one of his last sentences in his memoir.


He writes, ?All I know is that Nemo?s corn never tasted saltier, his coffee never smelled


fresher, than when these hundreds of Negroes gathered to say goodbye to themselves,


their heritage, and their sole link to each other, wiped out of existence by the newly


enforced anti-Jim Crow laws.?(Gates, 216)


It was hard for blacks to integrate into all white schools after being surrounded by


blacks for most of their lives. Whites weren?t the only ones to critique black attitude and


black style, blacks did it to themselves. Gates writes that when he was a child he


remembered that when blacks were admitted to all white neighborhoods or schools,


Negroes were the first to censure other Negroes(Gates, xiii). His father would say things


like, ?Don?t go over there with those white people if all you?re going to do is Jim Crow


yourselves(Gates, xii). Even Gates writes, ?I always reserved my scorn….for someone too


dark, someone too loud, and too wrong.?(Gates, xiii). The way Gates writes it, blacks


would scrutinize their own kind. Integration wasn?t as easy as going up to a white person


if you were black and saying, ?Hi, since were supposed to be integrating with each other I


guess we?ll be friends.? There was extreme racial tension and some whites would just


absolutely not integrate. In Chapter 17 Gates writes about an episode in his life when his


friends and himself try to integrate a local all white dance club. The owner forced the boys


out using violence and the next Monday the club was shut down by the Human Rights


Commission, because the owner wouldn?t integrate. In this incident the owner of the


nightclub closed his place down rather than integrate with the black community. Gates felt


that it was better to have the club be turned into a family restaurant than stay segregated .


Gates felt like a pioneer, someone who was helping out the cause fighting against


segregation and racism. Racism was a major cause of segregation throughout the book.


The view of Piedmont thorough Gates? writing reveals that whites and blacks got


along fine as long as colored people didn?t eat at the Rendezvous Bar, or buy property, or


dance with, date, or dilate upon white people(Gates, 27).This quote represented Gates?


sarcastic view of segregation. What he meant by this was that there wasn?t a problem


between blacks and whites until they started to integrate. Racism was the cause of


segregation throughout Piedmont and prevented blacks from doing a lot of the things


whites could. At the cut-rate, a local diner, blacks were only allowed to order their food


and leave. The proprietor of the diner, Carl Dadisman was very nice to colored people, but


he didn?t want colored people sitting in his booths, eating off his plates….or put their thick


greasy lips all over his glasses(Gates, 18). This quote embodies the attitude of the majority


of whites in Piedmont. It basically states that blacks were only allowed to integrate as far


as the whites would let them because the idea of blacks using the same items whites were


using was disgusting. Blacks were also not allowed to go to school with whites and even


after integration racism still controlled the way blacks were treated. Limits on the


inter-mixing of blacks were established by the school board. These limits were, no holding


hands, one colored cheerleader, one colored teacher, put most of the colored on the B


track, and several more. Gates? brother Rocky was restricted from winning the Golden


Horseshoe award because the hotel where they would have to stay was segregated(Gates,


98). The oppression of the school board of his brother gave Gates perseverance to excel


and win the horseshoe award 6 years later. Gates wanted to bring down the racial barriers


that the whites tried to establish.


As he got older Gates rebelled and started to read black books, grew an

Afro, and


started to wear dashikis and beads(Gates, 186), as well as many of the other blacks did.


The black power movement was strong and it was considered great to be black. Blacks of


light complexion wanted to be darker instead of lighter and the bad kink in black?s hair


now became good. The word brother and sister were passed around in conjunction with


the soul handshake. This was all a result of integration and the further acceptance of black


culture spawned these type of movements. Integration helped black men and women


release new ideas more easily and begin to break away from conformity, to rebel without


being overly criticized. The integration made blacks want to be blacker, to find their own


roots and study their own African culture. For the young black generation in Piedmont,


integration was a door that opened up a new idea of black culture, the creation of the afro,


and of a new found pride for being black.


Meanwhile for many of the older blacks in Piedmont, celebration was the furthest


thing from their mind. ?For a lot of Colemans in particular-integration was experienced as


a loss….and the nurturance of the womblike colored world was slowly and inevitably


disappearing(Gates, 184) The Colemans felt that the integration caused the loss of close


knit family ties. Tradition was heavily stressed in black families and integration caused


tradition to change. Families during the 1950?s were more liberal than their parents and


this caused anxiety with the older generations of blacks. They believed that the rebellious


idea of the younger generation would only cause trouble with the whites and things would


come to a bad end(Gates, 185). Gates believed that the older generation was scared of him


and the way he was handling integration. He believed that the older generation of blacks


thought the new way blacks acted, the way they dressed, and the odd hairstyles they wore,


would only cause trouble.


Gates writes a good amount about hairstyles in his memoir. Gates uses the


different hairstyles as a symbolic representation of the attitudes of blacks towards


integration. For example, in Chapter 4 Gates goes into detail about how hard he tried to


keep his hair as ?straight? as possible. ?I used all the greases…and everyone new about the


stocking cap, because your father wore one… grown men still wear stocking caps.?(Gates


46,47). The passage about the stocking cap refers to change. Gates writes that the older


men still kept their stocking cap in their top drawer as if to say these men are still holding


on to the past, the past of conformity or controlled hair. On the other hand, in 1966 the


?Black Power? movement moved through Piedmont and Gates grew an Afro. The afro


represented rebellion from the conformity blacks practiced previously with their greased


down hair. ?I got goose bumps just thinking about being black,…learning to look at


bushed-up kinky hair and finding it beautiful.?(Gates, 186)


The last mill Picnic was a time when Gates writes about the communities true


feelings on integration. Most blacks in Piedmont didn?t view the picnic as the law did, as a


segregated black party, but a communal coming together. Gates writes, ?For who in their


right mind wanted to attended the mill picnic with white people, when it meant shutting


the colored one down.?(Gates, 211). The Blacks believed that the picnic was something


that they wanted to keep for themselves, something that the whites shouldn?t take away.


Once it became integrated, the picnic lost its glory to the black community in Piedmont.


Growing up in and around the era of integration in the United States, Henry Louis


Gates goes through many different experiences and views dealing with race, racism,


segregation, and integration. His memoir, ?Colored People? offers insight into the


segregation of the community of Piedmont, West Virginia where he grew up. A place


where whites and blacks were almost forbidden to integrate until the court case of Brown


v. Board in 1954(Gates, 91) which stated that all schools must abolish segregation. The


integration of the school system led to the integration of many other establishments which


sometimes caused tension and trouble. There were many mixed feelings about integration


through the black community in Piedmont and some blacks didn?t enjoy the outcome of


integration. Gates used integration as a doorway to express himself and voice his opinion


through his actions and dress like many of the other young blacks in Piedmont. Gates and


his younger generation had a higher more optimistic view of integration while on the other


hand the older generation believed it to be trouble.


Gates, Henry Colored People Vintage Books;New York 1994

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