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 …show more content…
Specifically, Starr's ethnocentric lens highlights the need for empathy and understanding in the fight for justice, while Kenosha's cultural relativist lens highlights the complexities of the Black Lives Matter movement. The novel demonstrates the importance of listening to and understanding different perspectives in the fight for …show more content…
She understands that different forms of oppression intersect and affect marginalized communities differently. This understanding is crucial for creating real change, as it requires solutions addressing specific intersections and impacts on marginalized communities. The author, Angie Thomas, uses imagery and symbolism, such as the description of Kenisha "wearing different masks" (Thomas 150), to symbolize the multiple ways she experiences oppression as a Black woman. Through Kenisha's interactions with Starr, a Black woman from a different socioeconomic background, Thomas shows her understanding of intersectionality. This is reflected in the novel's themes of intersectionality and the need for systemic change, highlighting the importance of considering multiple perspectives in the fight for
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 the novel The Hate U Give written by Angie Thomas, The main character Starr struggles with speaking out about the death of her childhood friend Khalil due to threats from gangs, police, and not wanting to betray her community. The novel is mostly about the crooked shooting of Khalil by a police officer, and how Starr reacts. Throughout this book, Starr deals with fear of speaking out about her friend’s death and what really happened the night of the crime. One of the biggest reasons for Starr's fearfulness of speaking out about the death of Khalil is because of the gangs within the community she lives in.
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.
Dear Federal Way Public Schools Board of Directors, In this world, there are some issues that everybody has to learn about at some point. Some issues in this world are more important to learn than others. There is a book called The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas that teaches us about a great blend of things such as racism, discrimination, abuse, and violence. The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas tells the story of a young girl named Starr who witnesses the death of her close childhood friend named Khalil Harris; Starr at first is shocked by the death of somebody that she has known for so long
“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
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.
"Officer One-Fifteen yells at me, pointing the same gun he killed my friend with" (Thomas 24). That happened to 16-year-old Starr Carter, who witnessed a shooting of her childhood friend Khalil by a white officer. In "The Hate U Give" by Angie Thomas, the book introduces a sad tragedy and a brutal community she is dealing with. Starr was brave enough to help her community and to stop the violence, which shows good leadership skills.
Ana Cecilia Viana Miss Nardi ENG1D1-h 6 June 2023 The concept of speaking up and its relevance in The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas Speaking up is something that may come easily to some but not to others. It is something many know they have to do but do not do it because of fear. In the novel, The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas, Starr Carter discovers that using her voice will strengthen her fight for justice in her community because she learns that speaking up promotes inclusivity, confidence, and a more educated society.
Although, songs are an untraditional form of literature readers can still easily compare traditional works to untraditional ones. “Changes” by Tupac Shakur and The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas, are two different works of literature that have many points in common. Topics such as discrimination, gang activity, drug trafficking, and violence within a community. Both Shakur and Thomas are spreading
Image being a six-year-old girl running away from the crossfire between drug dealers. That is exactly what Angie Thomas, the author of The Hate U Give had to experience at such a fragile age. Worried, her mom took her to the library to show her that the world was bigger than what she had experienced. This started Angie on the path to loving literature.
The Hate U Give is a book by Angie Thomas. The theme of the hate u give is some people get treated and looked at differently because of their skin color. Examples of this happening is when khalil was in the car with starr officer 115 came up to khalil and started questioning him and started assuming he's a drug dealer so then he makes khalil step out and then officer 115 shoots khalil 3 times. Starr goes to a white prep school there she has to talk proper and watch how she acts or she be seen as a stereotype the “loud angry ghetto black girl” she is being stereotyped based of her color and race which ties in to my thesis.
I look at the cops again. ‘You hear me? Khalil lived!’” (Thomas 412) “The Hate U Give” is a book about a african-american teenage girl name Starr Carter, while trying to deal with the death of her childhood friends and also trying to fit in at school is putting a toll on her. While already suffering the trauma from her dead friend, Natasha, she has to deal with witnessing another one of her friends death, Khalil; having to stand up for her dead friend and trying to find out who her true friends are is going to have a big impact her life.
As bullets ring in her ear and the fog clears, three bullets fly past her, and the environment suddenly shifts into a heartbreaking moment of silence. Starr Carter fights to resolve the harsh world she lives. Angie Thomas follows Starr Carter's mainly black neighbourhood of Garden Heights and the privileged, white community of Williamson Prep. Starr, the novel's protagonist, is left with the task of gaining justice for Kahlil, her best friend who gets shot by a cop. In The Hate U Give, Angie Thomas uses Starr Carter's character to demonstrate struggles while navigating through two different worlds, media struggles and how people's opinions affect her ability to speak out.
All the victims speaking up for the movement indicates that they will no longer tolerate the silencing of their voices because of political and social power. The movement is a great example of how intersectionality is considered in modern day issues and is a very effective tool for creating consideration of all factors in
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,