This was offensive because Starr took it as referring to the stereotype that black people like fried chicken. In another scene in the story, a conversation between Starr and Hailey goes “So I’m supposed to ‘get over’ the fact he (Khalil) was murdered?’ ‘Yes, get over it! He was probably gonna end up dead anyway.” This was very hurtful for Starr because Hailey was saying that Khalil wasn’t worth anything and that he should’ve been killed
When going to school, she thinks to herself, "I don’t have to think about Khalil. I just have to be normal Starr at normal Williamson and have a normal day. That means flipping the switch in my brain so I’m Williamson Starr. Williamson Starr doesn’t use slang… slang makes [her friends] cool, [while] Slang makes her, "hood.” Williamson Starr holds her tongue when people piss her off so nobody will think she’s the, "angry black girl.”
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.
In the novel The Hate U Give, the author Angie Thomas utilizes conflict and develops the central idea of The Hate U Give. Conflict is the challenge in the story that the main character has to face and underage as they try to solve the situation. The use of conflict portrays the central idea of how your past experiences shape how you grow as a person. Angie Thomas applied conflict to demonstrate the central idea regarding how past experiences shape personal growth. For instance, “Describing the moment when the shots rang out and Khalil looked at me for the last time; how I held him in the street and saw his eyes gloss over.
The Hate U Give, by Angie Thomas, is a novel about a girl named Starr who witnesses her close friend get shot unjustly by a police officer and wants to speak up, but can’t. In the beginning of the book, Star is scared to speak up about what happened, but later on she gains the courage and strength through her voice to fight about this unjust matter. Through Starr’s growth, the reader understands that your voice is your greatest weapon. Two ways that this theme is expressed towards the beginning of the book are when she says that she saw Khalil get shot and when Kenya calls her a coward.
The Hate U Give, a young adult novel published in 2017 by Angie Thomas, is about a Black teenage girl who faces various types of oppression. Starr Carter is a 16 year old girl who is stuck between a poor and rich life. She lives in Garden Heights, an impoverished neighborhood consisting mainly of black individuals, and attends Williamson Prep, a wealthy school mainly full of white students. Starr witnessed the shooting of her friend, Khalil Harris, whom she grew up with, and she also dealt with the racist actions of her peers; this led her to create negative aspects about herself. Starr’s continuous experiences of discrimination caused her to create negative thoughts about her identity.
The Hate U Give is about a 16-year-old girl named Starr Amara Cater who has to shift between two different worlds. She has to go through a phase of difficulties because of her race which plays a big part in her life. Starr witnesses an eye-opening event that involves seeing her own friend get killed by a police officer. Unlike most people in her community, Starr decides to speak up about the event. She was one of the few who was able to speak up about this situation going on in society.
In Angie Thomas's novel "The Hate U Give," the characters of Starr Carter and Kenisha Green demonstrate different critical lenses, with Starr embodying the lens of the "ethnocentric" and Kenisha representing the lens of the "cultural relativist." These differing perspectives ultimately impact the narrative by highlighting the complexities of the Black Lives Matter movement and the need for empathy and understanding in the fight for justice. The novel "The Hate U Give" by Angie Thomas tells the story of Starr Carter, a 16-year-old girl who witnesses the fatal shooting of her childhood best friend, Khalil, by a police officer. The novel deals with themes of racial injustice, police brutality, and activism and are based on the Black Lives Matter
8 Avery Ln Andover, Ma, 01810. 6,7,2024 Dear, Andover School Committee In English class we just finished reading The Hate u Give, a book based on a woman of color and all the struggles she experienced and people she knew experienced. This brought my attention to the English curriculum and how little books we get taught about different races and cultures. It's important as students to get the best education we can, to do that we need books that have diverse characters who teach us about these things.
"The Hate U Give" is a 2018 film based on the bestselling novel by Angie Thomas. It tells the story of Starr Carter, a young African American girl who witnesses the fatal shooting of her unarmed friend Khalil at the hands of a white police officer. The film explores the aftermath of the incident and its impact on Starr, her family, and their community. These characters, among others, contribute to the exploration of racism, discrimination, and social activism, highlighting the complexities and struggles faced by marginalized communities in their quest for justice and equality. The movie sheds light on the complexities of identity, the effects of racial bias, and the power of speaking out against injustice.
The Hate You Give by Angie Thomas. A girl named Starr attends a party, and at the party, she reconnects with her friend Khali, when gunshots interrupt the party, Khail decides to give Starr a ride home where he gets pulled over and gets fatally shot by an officer. The Hate You Give is relevant for high school students because it is educating the way society uses stereotypes of black people to justify violence and racism against them, which is relevant to today's society, and valuable to people of color and activists. The Hate You Give is a relevant text to high school students because it provides the theme of social justice, The reason the text is valuable is that it shows students the importance of tackling universal messages, for example, ¨At an early age I learned that people make mistakes, and you have to
The Hate You Give by Angie Thomas explores many themes, one of the most important themes is Voice. Angie Thomas created Starr, a teenager who witnessed her childhood best friend get shot by police and die right in front of her. The Hate You Give is not only about how she coped with his death but it's about how she explored a new side of herself. Starr feels like she has to be two versions of herself, Williamson Starr and Garden Heights Starr, and throughout the book we see Starr struggle with identity and how to act around certain people. After she witnessed Khalil, her best friend die, she realized that it didn’t matter which Starr she was, she had to be brave, strong, and courageous, Starr.
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,
You try to say something, but nothing comes out. You feel horrible and want to yell at everyone but can't. You risk your life for speaking out and so begins your search for justice. “The hate u give” is a novel written by Angie Thomas. Our main character is Starr Carter, a 16-year-old black girl who had just witnessed the death of her closest and best friend, Khalil.
In The Hate U Give, Angie Thomas demonstrates that code-switching and double consciousness heavily impact the lives of black individuals through the depiction of the character’s interactions with other communities. To begin, Starr Carter’s code-switching first becomes evident when she encounters law enforcement. Initially, Starr and her friend Khalil are pulled over by the police, and in this situation, Starr begins to code-switch as she remembers her father’s advice. “ “Starr-Starr, you do whatever they tell you to do," he said. "Keep your hands visible.