Du Dubois Color Line Essay

Words: 429
Pages: 2

Du Bois color line is considered to be the 20th centuries greatest problem. The color line is derived from the veil and double consciousness. With the existence of the color line it will be hard for blacks to gain the same level of success like the whites. Blacks and whites coexist in the world but they both have different experiences. All over the world the colored have suffered the most. “The workshops denies him work, and in the inn denies him shelter; the ballot box a fair vote, and the jury box a fair trail. He has ceased to be the slave of an individual, but has in some sense become the slave of society. He may not now be bought and sold like a beast in the market, but he is trammeled victim of a prejudice, well calculated to repress …show more content…
“When this evil spirit is judge, jury, and prosecutor, nothing less than overwhelming evidence is sufficient to overcome the force of unfavorable presumptions.” (Douglass 1881) The evil spirit is being referred to as the whites, and even though there is overwhelming evidence in favor for the black it does not outweigh the racial prejudice. If it continues to remain that way then blacks will continue to be injustice, oppressed, and hate. In other countries, such as Europe has no racial prejudice, and in England their verbal and physical expression has also has no racial prejudice. “White child feels nothing at the first sight of a colored man. Curiosity is the only feeling.” (Douglass 1881) This talks about how when a child who has not been trained to be racist towards blacks sees a black person and is only curious. Curious because of the unknown and not feeling hatred or anger towards the black. “Slavery, ignorance, stupidity, servility, poverty, dependence, are all undesirable conditions. When these shall cease to be couple with color, there will be no color line drawn.” (Douglass 1881) This would be the ideal goal to achieve, but there has to be a start in order to achieve