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Autor
Rezazade Faeze (Vali-e-Asr University of Rafsanjan, Iran), Zohdi Esmaeil (Vali-e-Asr University of Rafsanjan, Iran)
Tytuł
The Power of Being Color-Blind in To Kill a Mockingbird
Źródło
International Letters of Social and Humanistic Sciences (ILSHS), 2016, vol. 71, s. 47-53, bibliogr. 12 poz.
Słowa kluczowe
Literatura, Dyskryminacja
Literature, Discrimination
Uwagi
summ.
Abstrakt
Discrimination and racial injustice towards Blacks have existed among the groups of people since the very beginning of their gatherings as a communication and society. Throughout history, people of colored skin, especially Blacks, were not accepted in the Whites' communities due to the Whites' thought of supremacy over them. Regardless of their positive role and doing manual labor in keeping the wheels of the Whites' industry turning, Blacks were always treated as nonhuman and "clownish" creatures born to serve Whites. African Americans are the main groups of Blacks who suffer from discrimination and racial injustice because they are living among Whites, though segregated from the Whites' society. However, there are many white individuals who do not consider the skin color and treat Blacks as human beings and only humanity and good nature of the people matters to them. Nelle Harper Lee in her masterpiece, To Kill a Mockingbird, written in 1960, introduces three children (Scout, Jem, and Dill) and Atticus, who is Scout and Jem's father, as color-blind characters who fraternize with Blacks as humans without paying attention to their skin color. Therefore, using W. E. B. Du Bois' thoughts- regarding prejudice, discrimination, and racial injustice- in this article it has been tried to investigate Atticus' and three children's color blindness in the case of racism in To Kill a Mockingbird. (original abstract)
Pełny tekst
Pokaż
Bibliografia
Pokaż
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  2. G. M. Fredrickson, Racism: A Short History, Princeton, New Jersey, Princeton University Press, (2002).
  3. J. H. Moore, Encyclopedia of Race and Racism, Detroit: Thomson Gale, (2008).
  4. B. E. Whitley & M. E. Kite, The Psychology of Prejudice and Discrimination, 2nd ed., Wadsworth Cengage Learning, USA, (2009).
  5. W. E. B. Du Bois, Oxford world's classics, The Souls of Black Folks, (Ed. ) Edwards Brent, New York: Oxford UP, (2007).
  6. A. Stuart Wells, Both Sides Now: The Story of School Desegregation's Graduates, Berkeley: University of California Press, (2009).
  7. Lee Rust Brown, Emersonian Transparency, + Emerson, Ralph, Waldo, Raritan- A Quarterly Review. 9: 3 (1990) 127-144.
  8. T. J. Wise, Colorblind: the rise of post-racial politics and the retreat from racial equity, San Francisco, CA: City Lights Books, (2010).
  9. L. Champion, When You Finally See Them: The Unconquered Eye in To Kill a Mockingbird, The Southern Quarterly 37, no. 2, Reprinted by the permission of The University of Southern Mississippi, (1999) 237- 253.
  10. W. E. B. Dubois, Oxford world's classics, The Souls of Black Folks, Ed. Edwards Brent, New York: Oxford UP, (2007).
  11. H. Lee, To Kill a Mockingbird, J. B. Lippincott Company, New York, (2010).
  12. M. B. Katz, and T. J. Sugrue, The Context of The Philadelphia Negro: The City, the Settlement House Movement, and the Rise of the Social Sciences, Modern Critical Views, W .E. B. Dubois, (Ed. ) Bloom, Harold: Chelsa House, (2001).
Cytowane przez
Pokaż
ISSN
2300-2697
Język
eng
URI / DOI
https://doi.org/10.18052/www.scipress.com/ILSHS.71.47
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