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AMERICAN IDENTITY

moonbear26 de Mayo de 2013

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Definitely in a society such as the American, are constantly changing factors that make people choose to defend what they believe is rightfully theirs them and the Americans always have in mind that its discoverers and colonizers were white people, which gave meaning to their homeland and those who gave freedom to be in it, and when they step with strangers as black people who came to the country as slaves, for Americans are merely intruders coming to invade their territory, regardless that blacks arrived as slaves to America and will serve to whites, blacks never have the same conditions of life than white people, in a way because they were strangers who came to live on what whites produced and created.

Over time though new laws were created to protect black people and white people have taken another perspective against racial, not quite indifferent to them will always be that gap that blacks are black and whites are white, starting this although the economy forward and forcing the modern world of constant change society there will always be discrimination in all aspects and at possible areas of society, as well as education without neglecting religion and of course policy.

The American identity has been framed in the always chauvinist, men always were the ones who had a say in society, in political and social, and also were the only ones who could work or give an opinion on any topic. The rise of the Jazz Age Factor was an implied social changes at the excess money that circulated everywhere, the social life of the people increased with the days of social meetings became more constant, 1 "Ernest Hemingway "plus 2" Scott Fitzgerald "were victims of this age where alcohol was a constant in their lives making them dependent on the vice. And for a consumer society.

1 “Ernest Hemingway” life in www.wikipedia.com , 2” Scott Fitzgerald “life in www.wikipedia.com

By this time it was more than evident that although slavery had been abolished by President Lincoln, the white people still treated black people as their servitude and that was all they served, for black people to serve him white people.

3“Can’t hang around white man's kitchen,…", Moreover there was still a gap that did not allow social that black people and white people were equal, the niggers felt they were not anything or anyone for that for them there was not any kind of respect were only the servants of the white society. 4. “She turned her head and spat out some blood and teeth and said…”

sometimes much of the season was undoubtedly the right for women to exercise for the first time ever to vote, to participate to have a say on a chauvinist society where men alone could decide about their lives and for their future, they would have more benefits and would be more respected in society since won the right not only to vote but to enter academic classrooms to develop their knowledge and work to demonstrate not only the skills to work from home but in many other.

could be said that the identity of Americans will always be framed on each of their events, whether socially and politically, and culturally will be reflected in each of Americans living certainly booming They will be cut every age with high and lows that this will bring, moreover suggest changes and advances progress and overcoming and united states of America obviously fits these changes. but something that with the passage of time is not reflected to disappear completely is racism will always be a social gap not allow to see black and white people in the same scale with equal conditions.

3. William Faulkner: Tale, that Evening Sun Go Down “Can’t hang around white man's kitchen," Jubah said. "But white man can hang around mine. White man can come in my house, but I can't stop him. When white man want to come in my house, I ain't got no house. I can't stop

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