Anne Moody: Childhood Anne Moody witnesses the superiority that white individuals have over black individuals. In the beginning, she does not quite understand yet, but she begins to notice the discrimination and inequalities in wealth, employment, and rights that separate Black people from white people. Her family life was full of many hardships; her father deserted the family, her mother was left trying to support their family with a meager income, and her mother found a new husband (Raymond). Raymond's family did not like Mama or her children because of their darker skin, Raymond tried to support the family by becoming a farmer but failed and cannot find another job, the family struggles to afford necessities, etc. Anne Moody was forced to …show more content…
Anne would remember this abuse, and it could affect her later in life. Anne mentions how "the electric lights were coming on in Mr. Carter's big white house as all the Negro shacks down in the bottom began to fade with the darkness" (5). While the white individuals are at the top with lights on in their homes, the blacks are at the bottom in darkness in their shacks. I think the little details Anne mentions in the book Perryman 2 about the differences between the houses of whites and blacks are also significant because she is beginning to see the inequalities. After her father abandoned them, Anne watched her mother go through the pain of being left behind, struggling to support her family on the small amount of income she was making, and not being accepted by her new husband's family. Multiple times in the book Anne Moody describes how Mama did not make much money and sometimes they did not have enough money for food (13). She will always remember seeing her mother struggle to support their family. These are not the only important events in her childhood, but I think these are some of the main events that will shape her character and her values in the