A Choice Of Weapons Poem Analysis

Words: 555
Pages: 3

There is no one in this world that does not struggle or go through difficult times. In the poem Blink Your Eyes by Sekou Sundiata and a short story A Choice of Weapons by Gordon Parks shows social prejudice towards black people. Blink Your Eyes tells a short story of a black man who find himself restricted because of racist laws. He was faced with racism when he was stopped by a police officer who claimed he ran a red light, “Ride when the hard times come, ride when they’re gone, in other words the light was green.” This showed evidence that he had not ran the red light and was pulled over for no apparent reason. In my opinion, I think this clearly hint to the readers how accustomed the black became to being treated unequally because of their …show more content…
He was not allowed in the theater, drugstore, or a department store because he was black. He was looked down from the salesman right when he stepped into the department store for a men’s coat. They used the ‘beat around the bush’ method when the speaker asked for a camel’s hair coat but they shrug him off and said, “Come to think of it, I’m sure we don’t have your size in stock.” They judged him and simply thought he could not afford it. Later on in the story, the speaker had found a backbone to help him; a camera. A camera that capture moments. That was his defense in his world.
Both characters from have similarities and differences. Firstly, because they are both the same color, they’ve witnessed and experienced such horrible comings. They were criticized and judged for who they are. Their difference is that in A Choice of Weapons, the speaker stood up for himself and did not hesitate to fight back. He had a defense, a camera that could capture moments that can be used against any other. On the other side, the speaker in Blink Your Eyes could not speak up because he wasn’t able to or he simply could not. He had nothing to defend