Black Men and Public Space

Essay by jmonsantoCollege, Undergraduate April 2004

download word file, 2 pages 5.0

In a society as culturally diverse as the one we live in, you would think that people would learn to be more accepting of others. Nevertheless, there are still those who simply cannot. In his essay Black Men and Public Space, Brent Staples describes something that most young black men experience on more than one occasion in their lives. Being perceived as a criminal simply based on his "unwieldy inheritance", the color of their skin.

Staples recalls his experience as a 22-year-old graduate student away from home for the first time. His first "victim", as he puts it, was a young white woman who practically runs down the street when she sees him walking down the same street behind her. It is ironic that he calls this woman his victim when in reality it is Staples who was the victim in the situation. He had done nothing that deserved such mistreatment.

He is the victim of her prejudice. She was the one that was wrong in her judgment of him. He thought that there was enough of a distance between them but it was obvious that it was his appearance that scared the woman away. After all, he was a young black man, 6 feet 2 inches with a beard and billowing hair walking the streets of Hyde Park, a predominantly white neighborhood, with both hands in the pockets of his military jacket. This when he realizes the power he possessed. The power to alter public spaces by simply being black.

Staples notices the sounds of car doors being locked as he passes by, the women who clutch their purses closer to them, or the storeowner who watches him closely and brings her Doberman out front when he enters her jewelry store. The encounters he has had with cab...