The cultural change from youth to adults in the United States is a period of physical mature, often accompanied by a gradual change in the perception of the world around us. In an era when Anne Moody grew up in Mississippi, it was often a vicious racial discrimination, despite the liberation of the African-American slave 80 years ago. Many former federal state laws like the Mississippi black code often contain provisions that severely restrict the rights of African Americans.
Anne Moody's autobiography from the Mississippi era, Ann Moody of the Mississippi era is that she grew into a black girl in adulthood. The choice of Moody's started from the beginning - when she was 4 years old, a poor tenant's child worked for the white farmer. She is trying to survive in one of the most racial countries in the United States, so she overcame obstacles such as discrimination and hunger. By telling the stories of her life ... Jane Air is a story of the classic Jane Air era of Charlotte Bronte, an "adult" story. The main character is Jane, from childhood childhood to adult maturity. During this journey, Jane experienced the fight of education and containment. So she tried to understand herself and the world. But, whether it is a real physical containment or a spiritual containment, she often has to fight with all kinds of containment. This educational war
The Mississippi era is approaching the era of Mississippi Ammoody details the experience of growing up to a black woman in the rural village of Mississippi before and during the civil rights movement. Memoirs encompass Ann's life from childhood to adulthood. It attracted the black life of afforestation work for several years before the civil rights movement started. It clearly outlines poverty, despair, and pain experienced by blacks working for this purpose.