On this blog site, you will be completing your reader response assignments. You will have 2-3 a week. Your information is safe; only the members of this class and I have access to this site. Do not pass out your log-in information.

Respond critically to each piece. You may also respond to your classmates' comments.

Make sure your comments are proper, respectful, polite, and meet the word count assigned with the article.

Have fun! :)

Friday, February 14, 2014

Black Men and Public Space

Black Men and Public Space -By Brent Staples

Read the essay below. Respond with 130-200 words.

Why do you think Staples shares this insight and these stories?

What does it say about society?

Is it showing a positive or negative picture?

Why is the picture this way?

In today's society, is this situation true to other races or creeds of people?

Don't forget your word count!

BLOG DUE TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18th. 

Brent Staples. “Black Men and Public Space,”
Harpers Magazine. 1987.

“Black Men and Public Space”--Brent Staples (b. 1951) earned his Ph.D. in psychology from the University of Chicago and went on to become a journalist. The following essay originally appeared in Ms. Magazine in 1986, under the title "Just Walk On By." Staples revised it slightly for publication in Harper's a year later under the present title. The particular occasion for Staples's reflections is an incident that occurred for the first time in the mid-1970s, when he discovered that his mere presence on the street late at night was enough to frighten a young white woman. Recalling this incident leads him to reflect on issues of race, gender, and class in the United States. As you read, think about why Staples chose the new title, "Black Men and Public Space."

My first victim was a woman-white, well dressed, probably in her early twenties. I came upon her late one evening on a deserted street in Hyde Park, a relatively affluent neighborhood in an otherwise mean, impoverished section of Chicago. As I swung onto the avenue behind her, there seemed to be a discreet, uninflammatory distance between us. Not so. She cast back a worried glance. To her, the youngish black man-a broad six feet two inches with a beard and billowing hair, both hands shoved into the pockets of a bulky military jacket-seemed menacingly close. After a few more quick glimpses, she picked up her pace and was soon running in earnest. Within seconds she disappeared into a cross street.

That was more than a decade ago, I was twenty-two years old, a graduate student newly arrived at the University of Chicago. It was in the echo of that terrified woman's footfalls that I first began to know the unwieldy inheritance I'd come into--the ability to alter public space in ugly ways. It was clear that she thought herself the quarry of a mugger, a rapist, or worse. Suffering a bout of insomnia, however, I was stalking sleep, not defenseless wayfarers. As a softy who is scarcely able to take a knife to a raw chicken--let alone hold one to a person's throat--I was surprised, embarrassed, and dismayed all at once. Her flight made me feel like an accomplice in tyranny. It also made it clear that I was indistinguishable from the muggers who occasionally seeped into the area from the surrounding ghetto. That first encounter, and those that followed, signified that a vast, unnerving gulf lay between nighttime pedestrians--particularly women--and me. And I soon gathered that being perceived as dangerous is a hazard in itself. I only needed to turn a corner into a dicey situation, or crowd some frightened, armed person in a foyer somewhere, or make an errant move after being pulled over by a policeman. Where fear and weapons meet--and they often do in urban America--there is always the possibility of death.
In that first year, my first away from my hometown, I was to become thoroughly familiar with the language of fear. At dark, shadowy intersections, I could cross in front of a car stopped at a traffic light and elicit the thunk, thunk, thunk of the driver--black, white, male, or female--hammering down the door locks. On less traveled streets after dark, I grew accustomed to but never comfortable with people crossing to the other side of the street rather than pass me. Then there were the standard unpleasantries with policemen, doormen, bouncers, cabdrivers, and others whose business it is to screen out troublesome individuals before there is any nastiness.
I moved to New York nearly two years ago and I have remained an avid night walker. In central Manhattan, the near-constant crowd cover minimizes tense one-on-one street encounters. Elsewhere--in SoHo, for example, where sidewalks are narrow and tightly spaced buildings shut out the sky--things can get very taut indeed.

After dark, on the warren like streets of Brooklyn where I live, I often see women who fear the worst from me. They seem to have set their faces on neutral, and with their purse straps strung across their chests bandolier-style, they forge ahead as though bracing themselves against being tackled. I understand, of course, that the danger they perceive is not a hallucination. Women are particularly vulnerable to street violence, and young black males are drastically overrepresented among the perpetrators of that violence. Yet these truths are no solace against the kind of alienation that comes of being ever the suspect, a fearsome entity with whom pedestrians avoid making eye contact.

It is not altogether clear to me how I reached the ripe old age of twenty-two without being conscious of the lethality nighttime pedestrians attributed to me. Perhaps it was because in Chester, Pennsylvania, the small, angry industrial town where I came of age in the 1960s, I was scarcely noticeable against a backdrop of gang warfare, street knifings, and murders. I grew up one of the good boys, had perhaps a half-dozen fistfights. In retrospect, my shyness of combat has clear sources.

As a boy, I saw countless tough guys locked away; I have since buried several, too. They were babies, really--a teenage cousin, a brother of twenty-two, a childhood friend in his mid-twenties-- all gone down in episodes of bravado played out in the streets. I came to doubt the virtues of intimidation early on. I chose, perhaps unconsciously, to remain a shadow-timid, but a survivor.
The fearsomeness mistakenly attributed to me in public places often has a perilous flavor. The most frightening of these confusions occurred in the late 1970s and early 1980s, when I worked as a journalist in Chicago. One day, rushing into the office of a magazine I was writing for with a deadline story in hand, I was mistaken for a burglar. The office manager called security and, with an ad hoc posse, pursued me through the labyrinthine halls, nearly to my editor's door. I had no way of proving who I was. I could only move briskly toward the company of someone who knew me.

Another time I was on assignment for a local paper and killing time before an interview. I entered a jewelry store on the city's affluent Near North Side. The proprietor excused herself and returned with an enormous red Doberman pinscher straining at the end of a leash. She stood, the dog extended toward me, silent to my questions, her eyes bulging nearly out of her head. I took a cursory look around, nodded, and bade her good night.

Relatively speaking, however, I never fared as badly as another black male journalist. He went to nearby Waukegan, Illinois, a couple of summers ago to work on a story about a murderer who was born there. Mistaking the reporter for the killer, police officers hauled him from his car at gunpoint and but for his press credentials would probably have tried to book him. Such episodes are not uncommon. Black men trade tales like this all the time.

Over the years, I learned to smother the rage I felt at so often being taken for a criminal. Not to do so would surely have led to madness. I now take precautions to make myself less threatening. I move about with care, particularly late in the evening. I give a wide berth to nervous people on subway platforms during the wee hours, particularly when I have exchanged business clothes for jeans. If I happen to be entering a building behind some people who appear skittish, I may walk by, letting them clear the lobby before I return, so as not to seem to be following them. I have been calm and extremely congenial on those rare occasions when I've been pulled over by the police.

And on late-evening constitutionals I employ what has proved to be an excellent tension-reducing measure: I whistle melodies from Beethoven and Vivaldi and the more popular classical composers. Even steely New Yorkers hunching toward nighttime destinations seem to relax, and occasionally they even join in the tune. Virtually everybody seems to sense that a mugger wouldn’t be warbling bright, sunny selections from Vivaldi's Four Seasons. It is my equivalent of the cowbell that hikers wear when they know they are in bear country.

12 comments:

  1. I think that this guy shares this story with us because he wants to show how much his life is different than ours. He wants us to picture how he always gets accused of doing things because of his skin color. He shows us the struggle of being a black reporter and going to a crime scene to not get a story but be arrested. This shows that our society relates certain behaviors and criminal actions with what skin color you have. America as a whole believes that all African American citizens are like that people in gangs in Chicago. This article shows a negative picture not only on him but also on us. We are the people who are thinking that he is the bad guy, when really it is us.
    WC 133

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  2. Staples shares these stories and insight, to make people understand how we treat African Americans. It shows that our society, people judge people by their looks and not by who they truly are in the inside. People just look to see who someone is from their appearance and if they do not like them then they will judge them for who they are. This is showing a negative picture, because society isn’t giving people a chance to prove that they are different and are not who they appear to be. It shows that are society is very judgmental, if you are not a certain type of person then you are not welcomed or thought of as someone important. In today’s society people in different races and groups of people are still looked down at and ridiculed for who they are. Things are better now with the African Americans, but they are still looked at differently then the white men in the U.S. In my opinion everyone should judged equal and not more because of their race or group of people they belong to. (WC-183)

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  3. I think Staples shares this insight and these stories to show how bad racism had gotten. Also, I think he wanted to show people that he could hide his anger and frustration on the issue in order to keep some sort of peace between blacks and whites. I think he wanted to set an example to other black people and explain to white people that all black people aren’t bad. This story shows that society looked down on blacks through meaningless stereotypes and that was not fair to the good black people. It is showing a negative picture of society because that was the mindset of people back at that time. I think racism is better today. I know some people still dislike other people of certain races because of stereotyping but that is not right to judge everyone of that race according to was one or a few people do. (word count: 154)

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  4. I think that staples shares his stories and insight to inform the reader of the troubles that he faced for simply being a black man and walking down a street at night. This says that as a society at the time we had not moved on from the racial profiling that had started a long time ago and who knows maybe even today. It paints a very negative picture of our American society. We are a very judgmental and stereotypical society. I feel that this goes on in today’s society but for even more groups of people. For example after 9/11 I feel that many people are uncomfortable around Arabic people which is not fair to that person for they may not be associated or even agree with those actions. Not all white people are an Adolf Hitler and not all Arabic or Muslim people are a Bin Laden.
    Word count: 149

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  5. This article shows how in society today we have taken our suspicious nature to new heights. We have become so paranoid over the years that we don’t take into account a single person’s actions, but we blanket an entire group of people. This article paints a very somber and disheartening picture of society. The fact that this man, of good standing, has to belittle himself down to the equivalent of a trained animal, force to go out of his way to avoid peaceful confrontation with people who are struck by paranoia over something as insignificant as skin tone. In today’s society this paranoia has struck not only people of African descent, but all ethnicities that have contact with one another. It has become a vicious cycle that seems to have no end. The Caucasians fear the Africans, Hispanics, and Indians because that is what they are taught to do by society fear the unknown and the different. The cycle continues when they come into contact with us. This is due to the fact that society has taught them this too, they are taught to fear the whites because they can not be trusted. We will not trust them in return. (200)

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  6. This article just shows that our society judges before we really know somebody. Staples just gives us a little insight on the life of a black man, but I'm sure it gets even worse than that. People never truly know who a person is on the inside because we are too busy judging their appearance. It is incredibly sad that this guy, who is just trying to earn a dollar to live, gets ridiculed so much. They can’t even to do their job because people judge them. Like that guy that went to write about a case then gets accused of being the killer and gets hauled off in a cop car. Instead of just assuming a black person is a bad guy, why don't you get to know them? I'm sure you will be surprised. This article paints a negative picture of our society today because it shows how judgmental we are.
    Word Count: 152

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  7. Reasoning for Staples sharing his thoughts is to show how judgmental people are nowadays. Staples is tired of “trying” to avoid looking like a criminal or threat to people. Staples assumes that he can simply walk around at night with his big camo jacket on and not seem a rapist to a white women. Sure that women was making assumptions, but it is better safe than sorry. It is hard in Staples position, but anyone wearing a camo jacket and walking around at night may seem potentionally dangerous. This is a negative image on society but Staples probably shouldn’t be walking around so late anyways. It is ridiculous to hear the locking of cars as he passes. That is just society though. The explanation is fear. These assumptions will probably never go away, even for many other races and cultures this fear occurs. The right thing in Staples situation to do is to not act like a murderer, whistle to some Beethoven, and ignore others. (165)

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  8. I think that Staples shares this story because it really hurt him to be treated this way and he wants to help other people so that they don’t ever have to feel this way. I think he also wants to inform people to not treat others this way. This story explains that society is a stereotypical monster that can rear its evil head at anytime. I think this paper is showing both a positive and negative picture. The positive is that people are not like this everywhere, and the negative is just how evil people can seem just because you look different. I think in today’s society this still happens. I believe that this look is now given to Muslims. This is because of the war we are in. When you see a Muslim on the street you instantly think Unabomber and that is not right. Word Count: 146

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  9. Staples shares this insight as to inform the public of the ludicrous fear that people feel toward him and others based solely on the color of his skin. This essay tells how prejudice society can be. Staples has never given a reason for others to fear him. The late night walks that he enjoys taking are not a action taken to strike fear simply a pleasantry that he enjoys. This paints a very negative picture of society. This unnecessary prejudice and fear paints a very dark daunting picture of society as a whole. Why would a black man walking on the street automatically be put into a rapist or murderers shoes because he is a man of color? Unfortunately this is a problem in today’s society however it is no longer African Americans, but since 9/11 it has become the Muslims or simply those people from the Middle East. When someone with Middle Eastern decent is seen on the street or in a store or at a school they are labeled a terrorist. This is the same as that plight of blacks during Staples’ time and even before. Word Count - 188

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  10. I think that Staples shares these stories to show how stereotypical people are, especially in urban areas. It shows that even though people are accepting other races, they aren't comfortable with them and that people form opinions without knowing them. He is painting a negative picture because it shows that black males can't even go for a night-time stroll without having to be victims of nervous looks and being avoided all together. The picture is like this because it educates people on how unfair it is, hoping that it will cause them to not judge someone right away. This is true for all races because there are stereotypes for every race: blacks are thugs, Mexicans are all illegal immigrants, Asians are all geniuses, and all Muslims are terrorists. Staples' story shows just one of the cases in which people are treated poorly, but our society needs to learn to be comfortable with different races.
    WC:154

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  11. I think staples share these stories to show how people can judge other people before they actually know them. He people today have some what become confront able with other races, but they still have theirs doubts and watch where they are and what they are doing. I think that these stories are a good thing because it shows us that black people and Mexicans and races aren’t all bad people. They are all the same to us. Just because a black person wants to have a nice stroll down the park in the evening doesn’t mean he is going to rob a bank or rap a girl in the night. Our society today needs to relax and trust people it doesn’t hurt to be caution but don’t make it a big deal. Word count 133

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  12. I believe that Staples shares this story to show how quick society is to judge. Society is so used to going straight to every stereotype possible and applying that to any and every situation. Most people today can be very comfortable with other races, but there is still the wariness in how the act around them. The picture that this shows is very negative, because it shows that society still cannot accept everyone equally. Other races, not just African-Americans, are included in this picture. Many people still believe that if you see a black man in a store, they will steal, or if you see them at night, then you will be raped. Neither of these are true, but people still believe it. Trust is a big issue, and society is not ready to give their trust to other races as a whole.(143)

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