How long can you really know someone unless you take the time to see what they did. In James McBride's non-fiction, water color, Ruth McBride is the perfect example that my mother did everything I can do. On the other hand, her good parents came out. She went to school for all the children and strongly encouraged him to do the right thing. She did not establish a real connection with the child, but she did not tell them because she beat them.
In the color of water, James McBride wrote his autobiography and a tribute to his mother, Ruth McBride's life. Ruth married Andrew Dennis McBride, a Negro from North Carolina. James' childhood age was spent in a chaotic family of 12 children. Ruth did not want to discuss the painful details of her early family life when her abusive father Tate told her sullen and gentle mother, Ma Mei. Ruth broke her relationship with all Jewish families.
"Color of water" is James McBride's verification of ethnic, religious and social origins. The author was a son of Ruth Jordan, born in Poland, when he was two years old in 1923 he moved to the United States with a Jewish family. "Water color" not only explores James McBride's past but also reveals his mother Ruth's family and the background of his life. In this article we will explain the differences between the two characteristics of mother and child, their similarities and differences, and how to deal with specific problems such as identity and social exclusion. In addition, since identity building is closely related to families, family concepts, and homeless, it is reflected.
What it means to find a family and make a white mother a black child - James McBride gives an answer
In James McBride's "Water Color" and Harry Mullisch's "Attack", the hero of the novel has a similar dilemma in self discovery by revealing his past. James McBride tells his story in his autobiography, but Antonsteen Wake faced a civil war with their struggle to understand their real existence, but everyone deals with the mystery of the past In order to use different ways. When James McBride discovered his mother's legacy and eventually used his research report to overcome his racial ambiguity, Anton Stenwick was an unforgettable memory of his childhood I tried to hide.