Essay sample library > I Am Not Your Negro

I Am Not Your Negro

2023-02-10 11:00:01

James Baldwin is one of the most important voices of America in the 20th century and thanks to this movie, his voice seems to be more important than ever. This important movie shares Baldwin 's racist opinion in his 63 - year - old life. Anger, depletion, introspection, enlightenment is the way Baldwin encountered (letter from Samuel Jackson, outstanding performance of Raul Parker). This movie needs to be shared at home, school, and where discussion is possible.

James Baldwin led a difficult and beautiful life. The poor people raised in the harem could get out of the isolated US burden and build a position as one of their improvement heroes. But as he explained in Raul Pike's latest documentary, "I am not your black", a black child raised in the United States of John Wayne made him a villain by default. Like Wayne's native American who was killed and advised in the movies, blacks are a country's unpopular backbone. As Baldwin said, the history of black Americans is the history of the United States, as this timely documentary shows, history itself repeats itself. According to his last unfinished book "Remember this house", the movie reminds me of Medga Evers, Marko, reminiscing Baldwin's own words (Samuel Jackson speaks). M. X and Martin Luther King 's memories of life and sports. Jr. Although this is a moving and beautiful movie, in addition to commemorating their lives, they play a central role in American ethnic relations. Ignorance or reluctance to see what we can not accept is the core of our horrible culture, which is summarized through fear. It is a fear of the other side and a fear to yourself. The only problem I can see in this movie is that you do not need to talk to someone like me or me. People like me go to see "moonlight", "fence", "go out", "I am not your black." Of course, we must always remember these facts, but those who need to hear them most are in the sand until such a movie is inserted between the NASCAR competition and the "wetland" episode I will keep putting their head down.

Probably the most shocking point of Raoul Peck's "I am not your black" is that this documentary is as good as before. According to James Baldwin's incomplete manuscript "Remember this house", "I am not your black" is focused on Baldwin's own memories of Martin Luther King, Little Malcolm, Medga Evers, and civil rights movement There. position. Peck in the 1960s made these pages a reality through soft Samuel Jackson and archival video narratives. Sometimes we paused the insertion of the ellipsis in discussions and interviews with lectures, roundtable discussions. Human relations, and often overlooked views, hence the invisible struggle of African Americans in society

The most painful documentary I have seen this year is about the slavery system of America and the heritage of racial discrimination. Unfinished pieces about James Baldwin's Martin Luther King, Malcolm X, and Medgar Evers say "I am not yours." Black people. "Baldwin is unwavering in analyzing the treatment of the United States and its black people. What I was most impressed was how relevant is his speech today. It is the director Ava DuVernay that I want to screen it with another documentary film "13 TH". Regarding the thirteenth amendment, it records that the current massive prison of black American citizens is an extension of slavery. Because of abolition of slavery to Jim Crow and apartheid, the United States continues racist policies in other ways. And always find other ways to use the Black Group as somehow arrogant labor. In a recent incarnation, it made monetary racial discrimination and imprisonment. The US prison system is increasingly privatized

I am your black man is neither the past nor the future. This is about the birth of American society based on contradictions of freedom and slavery. This is an erroneous promise of liberation and Jim Crow's bondage. This is about consumption of mean savory black body from yesterday's tree, leaving death on today's sidewalk. That is about the dangers of ignorant white supremacy in American society, and the most important thing is why you need "black people".