black men in public space essay

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    Black Males vs. Equality In the essay, “Black Men and Public Space,” Brent Staples discusses how black men are perceived. This essay first made an appearance in 1986 in Harper’s Magazine. Staples graduated from Widener University with honors. He also earned an MA and PhD from the University of Chicago in psychology. Brent Staples had many more accomplishments in his life. He was a reporter for the Chicago Sun-Times, assistant metropolitan editor for New York Times, editor of New York Times Book

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    challenge of our society is the stereotype that exists. One of the common stereotypes is that we deem black men as dangerous. Most people grow up with such a perception and feel it be true. In ‘Just Walk on by: Black Men and Public Space’ Brent Staples describes the way black men are perceived as dangerous individuals to society by his own experiences. He rightly acknowledges the occasional hatred that black men are subjected to in everyday social situations. Staples begins his writing with an anecdote using

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    The essay "Black Men and Public Space" written by Brent Staples displays racism and stereotyping toward black men by the way people perceive them and how they are treated in public. Staples writes how people, especially women, are scared and threatened by him by the way the act while he is around them. This essay shows how judgmental society can be and how race can affect how people treat others. I think that Staples uses his own experiences so that people can see what he goes through and to

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    In the essay “Black Men and Public Space” the author writes about his experience as a black male growing up in the mid-20th century. Brent Staples was born in 1951, in Chester, Pennsylvania. His father, Melvin Staples, was a truck driver; and his mother Geneva, a homemaker. The oldest of nine children, Staples grew up in Chester, but due to his dad becoming an alcoholic and having financial problems, they moved seven times before he finishing junior high school. Brent was born a year before Brown

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    4% of the United States population was African American. Despite being such a large portion of all the people in America, blacks are considered a minority due to the constant racial discrimination and social injustices they are exposed to day after day. Brent Staples wrote an essay titled, “Just Walk on By: Black Men and Public Spaces,” and brought light to the issue of black men, ironically, being endangered and victimized due to society’s treatment towards them. Although written back in the 1980’s

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    In the essay “Just Walk on By: Black Men and Public Space” by Brent Staples I witness the problems that African American men must go through. Is it right to judge people by appearance alone? I don’t think it is okay for people to deal with that. In the world today racial profiling still exists, People of color must walk and talk a certain way just to appease those who are near. In this essay, Brent Staples is that man who has to adjust his behavior in public to ease the nerves of anyone who may be

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    generations’ stereotypical views over the issue on young black males being viewed as dangerous has grown significantly. There are different reasons why these stereotypes occur in our society. People feel on edge when running into them in dark passageways, whenever it’s late at night. Also, while they’re sitting at red lights and notice someone walking towards their cars, they instantly initiate down the door locks. People think stereotyping black men this way keeps them safer because they assume the worst

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    In Brent Staples’ "Just Walk on By: Black Men and Public Space," Staples describes the issues, stereotypes, and criticisms he faces being a black man in public surroundings. Staples initiates his perspective by introducing the audience into thinking he is committing a crime, but eventually reveals how the actions taken towards him are because of the fear linked to his labelled stereotypes of being rapists, gangsters and muggers. Staples continues to unfold the audience from a 20 year old experience

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    In Brent Staples’ “Just Walk On By: Black Men and Public Space” he forces women to recognize the feeling of estrangement from the surrounding public that he has endured. He first took notice at the age of twenty two, when his own self-judgement resulted from scaring a woman when solely walking at night near his college, the University of Chicago. He maintained his dejected attitude when he wrote that a few years later, his own work mistook him for a thief instead of a journalist. Brent Staples heightened

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    identification or religious preference instead of their self-perception. African Americans are judged more for their race than for their self-perception. Brent Staples is an African American male who is treated unjustly for being black. In his story entitled “Black Men and Public Space”, he describes himself as “a softy who is scarcely able to take a knife to a raw chicken”, yet he is “often being taken for a criminal”. In his mind, he is a harmless man who could never cause harm to anyone. This is not how

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