Ta-Nehisi Coates Between The World And Me

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Pages: 3

Between the World and Me is a novel by Ta-Nehisi Coates that is a letter written by the main character to his fifteen-year-old son named Samori. The letter is about how to live in a black body in America. He interlaces his personal, historical, and intellectual development into his reflections on how to live in a black body in America.
Coates grew up in Baltimore in the 1980s, at a time when simply walking to school was dangerous enough to get people killed. He went on to study at Howard University, his Mecca, where he began pursuing his career as a writer. Coates's son, Samori, is born. The letter now talks about a discussion of the death of Prince Jones, an African American man killed by a police officer who wasn’t ever brought to justice. The book then follows Coates to New York City, where he makes himself known as a writer, and to France, where Coates would eventually bring his family. The letter then recounts the visit that Coates
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“The Dream thrives on generalization, on limiting the number of possible questions, on privileging immediate answers” Race is a theory; it is something to which totalitarianism is credited. White people are not actually white but rather they think they is white because it gives them their power and privilege. Racism is subsequently so ominous because the people that think they are white also do not think they are racists. They claim discriminations of wealth and education and treatment by the police are different things that just exist; they are more like ordinary forces than specific values, laws, etc. Racism is primarily enforced through the despoliation and suppression of the black