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Coming Of Age In Mississippi Summary

Decent Essays

Nothing quite affects someone’s life like having a criminal record. Jobs and education that were once available, could be ripped away with one negative background check. In “Coming of Age in Mississippi,” Anne Moody deals with discrimination for many more reasons than just a criminal record. However, could an African American in the segregated south really afford to add another checkmark to their list of prejudiced qualities? Anne makes it clear that she is upset with the activists who weren’t willing to go to jail for the honorable cause of fighting for civil rights for all Americans. Anne’s frustration with those activists who are unwilling to get arrested is unjustified because she never considers the possibility that some people have too much to lose by acquiring a criminal record. Many people would be overwhelmed by the conditions and uncertainty of imprisonment. Moody writes “I had to get out of all this confusion. The only way I could do it was to go to jail. Jail was the only place I could think in (Moody 281).” Does Anne ever realize that she could be in the …show more content…

Moody says “Those who did not go to jail were considered cowards by those who did (Moody 279).” The activists that were involved in the civil rights movement should not be considered cowards, because at least they took a position that was extremely unpopular at the time, supporting the rights of African Americans. It is not cowardly to want to protect and provide for one’s family. Being imprisoned certainly would have prevented one from doing this. Cowardice should not be defined by how much jail time someone was unwilling to do, but by the stance that they took on the issue, as even siding with the demonstrators was extremely courageous and dangerous. In a time of complete chaos in Mississippi, some people chose to take care of their families, providing a lifeline for the future of civil rights in

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