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Just Walk On By Brent Staples Analysis

Decent Essays

Even throughout the bloody civil war and the abolition of slavery in 1865, racism and ethnic inequality has always been prevalent all throughout the history of America and loomed large in society. Racial disparities affect people when it comes to securing the qualities of education, employment, healthcare, and much more. In Just Walk On By: A Black Man Ponders his Power to Alter Public Space, Brent Staples tells his perspective of racial profiling. Throughout the text, he notes several valid observations of racial discrimination: a woman who walked further away from him on the street, Podhoretz’s racial profiling in New York, a journalist who feared his appearance, and many more. These instances of profiling are accurate because he expresses his indignation of prejudice towards African Americans in his experiences, is …show more content…

“As a softy who is scarcely able to take a knife to a raw chicken - let alone hold it to a person’s throat - I was surprised, embarrassed, and dismayed all at once,” (Staples, 197). Staples discusses how he felt disappointed with the perception that others have of him because of his pure kindness and softness, which are both opinions and expressions. “Yet these truths are no solace against the kind of alienation that comes of being ever the suspect, against being set apart, a fearsome entity with whom pedestrians avoid making eye contact.” (Staples, 198). Staples states that women know danger is not a hallucination. The woman who ran away from him on the street believes that Staples was danger, which the author has elaborated with thought and feeling. “I had no way of proving who I was. I could only move briskly toward the company of someone who knew me.” (Staples, 199). When meeting a journalist in Chicago, he was mistaken for a burglar, which Staples describes with

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