In the book The Hate You Give" by Angie Thomas, pages 420–444 are about Starr, King, and Maverick,Hailey. They just got done protesting after the grand jury did not put the cop on trial for killing Kahlil. While Starr was protesting, looters started destroying all the shops in the neighborhood, including her dad’s shop. (419) This caused King to be arrested because the neighborhood teamed up blaming King for burning down Maverick's shop.
(Thomas 71) The fact that Starr has two personalities demonstrates that she cannot express herself when in school and cannot relate to her friends; this proves that her friends do not influence her and disproves Harris’s theory that, "peers trump parents” CITATION. On the other hand, Starr’s parents teach her many life lessons which eventually push her to get justice for Khalil (her friend who had a hairbrush ‘mistaken” for a gun). For example, when Starr and her father are talking about the oppression that African-Americans have experienced over the years, he points out,, "Drugs come from somewhere, and they’re destroying our community,... The [addicts] can’t get jobs unless they’re clean, and they can’t pay for rehab unless they got jobs.
In The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas, Starr learns to accept herself, accept her community and to use her voice to promote justice in the world due to the relationships she has with others. Furthermore, Starr struggles to be her true self anywhere she is, in Garden Heights she is one person and in Williamson she is another but her boyfriend, Chris, helps her with this. He makes her feel comfortable enough to just be Starr around him since they met, “Ever since, I don’t have to decide which Starr I have to be with him. He likes both” (Thomas 83). Evidently, her relationship with Chris helps her to accept and be who she is because he is the first person that she feels totally comfortable with.
Voting was not an option for African Americans until decades after the constitution was ratified. While the constitution gave them freedom, equality, and civil rights, it did not protect them from being viewed as second class citizens and from being treated unfairly. Even to this day, they are still discriminated against and treated/thought of poorly, not only by some people but also by some of the authority figures. If we use our first amendment rights, I believe that we can start a change in how oppressed minorities are treated by everyone. More awareness has been brought to this issue because of marches and protests that people are holding almost weekly.
On The Come Up was written by Angie Thomas, the author who also wrote The Hate You Give. Angie writes books that give people an inside look at what black people experience in real-time. She uses the storyline to show and express that the people who experience these things are human and deal with things just as much as the next person. Not only do her books paint the lives of minorities, they also paint some of the issues teens face daily.
The Hate U Give begins with Starr Carter, the 16 year-old protagonist, attending a Spring Break party with her friend Kenya. The party is in Garden Heights, the impoverished neighbourhood where Starr and her family live. At the party, Starr finds herself catching up with her childhood best friend Khalil, when a a gang dispute leads to a gunfight. Starr and Khalil leave the scene in his car, and are pulled over by a police officer due to a broken taillight. The officer asks Khalil to step out of the car and pats him down.
Netanya Dorlus Dr. Heyward SO121-SU23 – Intro to Sociology 3 August 2023 Hate U Give Film Analysis: Racism and Identity The young-adult-turned-feature film, The Hate U Give, adapted from the novel by Angie Thomas, explores the issues of inequality and race/ethnicity in a thought-provoking and impactful manner. The film centers around the story of Starr Carter, a Black teenager who navigates an often divided and racially charged society. She uses this film to open the door to explore the nature of identity while diving deep into the conflicts of racism, police brutality, culture, and community within the life of a colored individual living in America. These aspects of the film resonate deeply with those who can connect with it, highlighting
Angie Thomas, the acclaimed author of "The Hate U Give," drew inspiration from her own experiences and the world around her to write this powerful novel. Born and raised in Jackson, Mississippi, Thomas witnessed firsthand the racial tensions, inequality, and injustice in her community. These experiences, and her passion for storytelling, compelled her to address these pressing issues through her writing. " The Hate U Give" dives into the life of Starr Carter, a young African American girl who witnesses the fatal shooting of her unarmed friend Khalil by a police officer. The novel explores themes of racial discrimination, police brutality, identity, and activism.
Caden Mielke Mrs. Lusk English 10 28 February 2024 T.H.U.G Literary Analysis Essay Have you ever thought about someone thinking differently about you by the way they perceive you? In the novel, people tend to perceive Starr as a bad person, only because of where she lives. They believe that she lives on the low side of the area, and that she's a bad person for living there. In reality, she's a really nice person, and where she lives doesn’t affect her. In Angie Thomas’s novel The Hate U Give, the author develops the theme that other people's perceptions do not define one’s self.
Fiction is needed to develop other forms of thinking and to expand creativity. Fiction novels could help students view things from different perspectives. It may help us in a similar situation from the book for example,in the book “The hate u give “ by Angie Thomas there is a situation with police brutality and the way he handled it can inspire others to do the same or we could see where it went wrong and not do that. A young African American male is shot and killed by a white policeman. Garden Heights residents come together in the face of unspeakable tragedy which reflects the strong sense of community felt by those who live in Garden Heights.
People often change their behavior to accommodate different settings and people, however, it is important for one to be themselves. Angie Thomas’ novel “The Hate U Give” explores themes of identity, social expectations, and the struggle to find one’s voice. These themes are illustrated through the character of Starr Carter, where she struggles with her two starkly different worlds: Williamson, the predominantly white suburban school, and Garden Heights, Starr’s predominantly black neighborhood. As Starr navigates through these two conflicting identities, she faces numerous challenges that change her perspective of her own self and the world around her. In Angie Thomas’ novel “The Hate U Give,” the similarities and contrasting experiences of
“To money and fame, I changed my name And played a different game Tired of being trapped in this vicious cycle If one more cop harasses me I just might go psycho.” – Tupac Shakur “Tupac’s idea in the meaning behind the words that made up T.H.U.G. Life was that society’s perception and treatment of children who live in the ghetto has negative implications for everyone…” (Tariq 21), In the essay “Politics and Protest”, Malcolm Tariq cites these lines from Tupac Shakur in order to emphasize how the Black community constantly change their identities to fend off negative stereotypes from white people. Tariq’s description of the challenges of the black community coincides with Angie Thomas’s novel, The Hate U Give (2017), where Starr Carter, a teenage
When is it okay to question the authority of law enforcement? We learn from a young age that cops are supposed to be the ones we run to for help, and yet we’re constantly finding them being involved in a routine stop gone wrong. We constantly hear about the different times an African American person has lost their life after they were pulled over by a police officer. The novel turned movie ‘The Hate U Give’ by Angie Thomas helps portray an ounce of what families go through when they lose their loved ones to racial injustices. Losing a loved one will always be life altering especially when you learn that they were killed by a police officer.
Starr Carter, the protagonist of Angie Thomas’s young adult novel, The Hate U Give, epitomizes the subversion of cultural racial oppression through the development of an identity that encompasses multiple consciousnesses. As an African American teenage girl raised in a middle-class family attending a high school with primarily White upper-class students, Starr finds the need to prove her belongingness to both communities in Garden Heights and at Williamson Prep. Unlike her White upper-class counterparts at Williamson and African American middle-to-low-class counterparts in Garden Heights, Starr’s identity is multifaceted. She must act and interact with her peers with respect to her location, in other words, utilize double consciousness. However,
Like Ms.Oprah said Starr’s voice is her biggest weapon. Which Starr became more confident to use throughout the novel. Just like a weapon, one shot is all it can take. In Starrs case, one strong voice starts the