Discrimination against blacks by Ernest J. Gains Chapter 1 Introduction Charles Johnson stated that before the Civil War the "black problems" were not actually. Because there are only movable items in front of blacks. Negro war broke out because they wanted to be free in education, employment, voting, formal marriage, and even getting a surname (Butcher: 243). The Congress of 1875 passed the statue which allows equality and equipment for every race and color, but the famous 1876 Fressess - Ferguson distinguished it separately thanks to its "separate but equal" doctrine I decided to.
Gains, Ernest J. (Ernest James Gains) (1933 -) Novelist, short story writer, educator Ernest J. Gaines is one of the most successful and widely read African-American writers. His work reproduces the character and culture of his childhood home in the countryside of Louisiana, which was considered fictitious as "Bayonne" in his novels and short stories. Gains is working on the problem of identity of ethnic groups, communities, and individuals in this area with imaginary Bayonne. It is also exploring the wide application of these problems in modern American society. Ernesto James Gains was born on 15th January 1933 at River Lake Plantation in Pointe-au-Coupe-Parishe, Louisiana, and his family lives in Adrian J, a worker named Manuel Gains, during the slavery era did. Gains greatly influenced her life and writing. For anyone who has the most influential artist or me, any time, I will ask myself.
Slavery, civil rights movement and racial discrimination are just a part of the historical change of "Miss Jane Pittman's Autobiography" that Miss Jane Pittman experienced at Ernest J. Gaines. "The story of Miss Jane Pitman is an unusual story as she tells stories of her life and all the events she has changed.This book is a novel but used to make Gaines look like a real thing Thanks to the technique I am aware, the reader realizes that he is reading autobiography There are four ways to characterize it: they are the role of the character himself, the appearance of the role, the recognition of the characters of others, The three ways Gaines used to create the trustworthy character Jane Pitman included her own words, how other users handled her, what other users thought about her is.