American Literature The South Regional example essay topic
Blacks were looked at as possessions, not allowed to learn how to read or write, sleeping in dark, damp shacks dirtier than animal stables, beaten and raped at their owner's whim. Today, though the South still has an air of contempt that has carried itself through generation after generation of confederate pride, a new generation has a mind of its own believing that life is better lived in harmony. Our grandparents, mothers and fathers may still reference the African-Americans as "niggers", but the phrase makes the children of the 21st century's skin crawl. For example, my mother-in-law came for a visit and said, "The Smith's house was bought by a bunch of niggers.
There goes the neighborhood. All of our houses are worthless now". Her son and I are adamantly against racism. Their attempt to taint their children's belief system by implanting white supremacist ideals has failed. A new generation is born; a generation which better understands the melting pot that America has always been. Instead of "white pride", it's just pride; pride in being an American.
I believe this generation, being the so over-exposed to a wealth of media and knowledge, has drastically altered the regional literature of the South and for that matter, the United States as a whole. And how can adults operating under the "old southern principals" raise their children to value education and become doctors, lawyers and leaders of corporations. Maybe the parents didn't teach the children this drive for education? Maybe it's their peer discussions and television programming showing them that there is an abundance of opportunities outside of being a farmer, beer truck driver or a stay-at-home mother right out of high school. Television has been and continues to be a powerful tool in getting the word out to those underprivileged children living in poverty with seemingly no hope for a better life. Television is also assisting in changing the literature of a region by spreading a wealth of resources available from the abundance of commercials boasting easy mail-in or online college courses to programs geared towards children sending the message that they can be anything they want to be; these positive resources are becoming available to children at a young age and may assist in altering futures and breaking family cycle of poverty.
Producing a tentative topic for research into Regional American Literature would seem to entail a great deal of literary research, interviewing, investigating, comparing and conducting a number of case studies. I believe a viable topic for such a study could be the increase of media within the American family due to the decreasing costs of televisions and other media devises such as radios, compact disc players, digital video devise players, telephones, portable televisions, etc. These electronic devices have become somewhat disposable as compared to a time in history when they were considered an asset. This is specifically related to the rapidly growing technology field. A manufacturer can put out their newest model and in less than a year, a better model with more capabilities is unveiled rendering the older model obsolete and driving the price way down. This makes obtaining such media devices attainable to the middle and lower-class income families.
The more media devices a family accrues, the more connected they become to the media and the knowledge it can provide. I believe the old adage states that "knowledge is power". I whole-heartedly believe this to be true. The more we know, the more we can grow, and the better our future and the future of our children can become. It is possible to end a damming cycle within a family and create a double-headed family tree. True, we cannot totally severe the blood ties, but it is possible to secede from a negative family with beliefs vastly different than your own, yet remain in the fold under limited circumstances such as holidays and the like.
Just as a white supremacist family living in the back woods of Arkansas raise their children to hate all races, but loses one of its flock by allowing him or her to briefly attend middle school. It doesn't take much to show a child living under the poorest and unhappiest of conditions how much better life could be. A good teacher, a friend whose parents are liberal minded or a bit of media exposure can swing a child who might have been taught a way of life that long ago was thought to have been abolished. It is readily evident in society that the old ways of thinking and living are on the outs. Children are learning from one another, media programming, musical groups and the like, that life is best lived in symbiosis with tolerance and humanity.