Like the blacks of John Howard Griffin, I am as cruel as Cecil Foster's paradise, completely eroding the heart, body and wisdom of the oppressed people, but I'm inhuman It will even barbarous. Turn it. In an autobiographical diary, John Howard Griffin wrote "Black like me" and Cecil Fos's "paradise country", these two protagonists changed their way of life, 1 One is the United States. In Canada, just inhumane hatred, violence, and racist white matter racial acts are done.
The book I read is called "Black Like Me" by John Howard Griffin. John Howard Griffin is also the protagonist of this story, writer, and narrator. He is a middle-aged white Southerner who wanted racial justice in 1959. His plan is to make his skin darker and to pretend to be black. He called medical information service and told them what he was going to do They gave him the name of three dermatologists. The first name on the list, he made a phone call and made an appointment at once. He is exposed to ultraviolet rays and is taking oral medicine. Within a week, he looks like a black man. Then he confirmed that we gained full support from George Levitan, a black magazine editor we call sepia. This magazine funds a short trip to Griffin. Whatever he went, he felt difficulty being insulted. He was unable to find a job or a bathroom because he had no problem with his white male. He was very tired, lost hope and called P. D.
John Howard Griffin wrote a black man like me. As an experiment in 1959, John Howard Griffin, Caucasian, changed his skin pigmentation to a black man living in the deep south. As a black man, Griffin encountered the same racial blacks and was often robbed of a glass of water. He could not use the bathroom he could have used as a white man. Griffin wrote Black Like Me as an explanation of life. I was disappointed and gradually sympathized with the plight of African Americans. Unlike my mother, I ceased to use the word "n ...".