Thursday, May 30, 2019
Cry, the Beloved Country, by Alan Paton :: Cry, The Beloved Country Essays
Social Protest Cry the Beloved Country was a book written to bring about change. Through out the book Alan Paton reveal the social in rightful(prenominal)ices of South Africa. This whole book, although a fictional stories, is to protest of the ship canal of South Africa. Paton brings up the inequity of the natives verses the whites he makes points about education, superiority, and separation. Paton clearly showed that the white hu homophile is superiority to the black, he gives numerous examples throughout the novel. The white man had much money, a better job, a nicer house With James Jarvis, Paton showed that he was superior by making him live on high place, because he was so much superior than the natives that lived below him. At the end of the book James Jarvis (even though he had changed) could not get off his horse to talk to Steven Kumalo. He could commit easily gotten off but "such a thing is not lightly done" (307). Paton includes this part in the novel to show t hat the white man can be amicable with the natives, but they will always have to come out on top. The whites needed to feel like they were on a higher level than the natives. If this country ever wants to be as one the whites are going to have to give up there need for superiority. umteen times in the novel Paton showed there was a problem without even prescribeing it. One of the major examples of that would be when he gave the scene of people petition "Have you a room to let?" and the response would always be "no I have no room to let"(85). Paton dosent outright say that its horrible that there is not even enough housing for the natives and they have to cram together in shared houses with no privicy at all. He just tells us the story and the reader recognize that there is a problem. Paton offten leves it up to the reader to figure out the social injustices of South Africa. When Kumalo was talking about his news Absolam he said "he is in prison for the most t errible deed a man can do, He killed a white man" (144). Here Paton shows, again, how whites were considered to be superior to blacks. It could have been said the worst thing to do is kill a man, but in South Africas hostelry it was not the same if a black man was murdered as compared to a white man.
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