Physics dictates that forces come in pairs of equal magnitude and in opposite direction. This analogy parallels that struggle that minorities face today. As much as society would like to believe that everyone has the same opportunity to be successful, the struggles author Bell Hooks describes in her book Remembered Rapture reminds all of us that as far as we've come as a civilization, we still have a long ways to go.
In her essay "The Class and Politics of Writing", Hooks describes the obstacles she had to traverse to become an accomplished writer as an African American female. Being from a poor working class family of color herself, Hooks denotes the inequality and injustices she faced becoming a writer. She describes how mainstream publishing corporations rejected her writing and the writing of other minorities under the premise that it would invoke a resistance movement and the elitist group of individuals responsible for the circulation of information would never allow it. For her work to become recognized, she would have to turn to other methods of publishing. Hooks also mentions the resistance she felt from her parents. Writing about the secrets of her family was considered treason and her parents condemned her work. Many other writers were threatened for their well being if they wrote about the secrets of their families and some were even excommunicated.
Does racism still exist in America? The answer is unequivocally yes; but racism has changed. The Jim Crow south doesn't exist and lynchings don't occur in America. Racism has become more introverted, less mainstream, and ingrained into our psyche. No one told Bell Hooks that she wasn't worth publishing because she was black, it was mutually understood between her and the company but it wasn't dared to be said. No one told Bell Hook's that the experiences of an African American woman came second to that of an affluent white women, it went unsaid but completely understood.
As a civilization, we must grow and evolve together. It takes one of us to make the difference.
"He who passively accepts evil is as much involved in it as he who helps to perpetrate it. He who accepts evil without protesting against it is really cooperating with it"
-Martin Luther King, Jr.
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