this post was submitted on 21 Feb 2024
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Asklemmy
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I read "The Colour Purple" at around 14 and it had a big impact on me. Lots of opportunities to discuss race, slavery, inequality in general.
I also read Uncle Toms Cabin around the same age which I found much harder to connect with but others in my class found that very impactful.
Thanks! Added to the reading list.
It's very welcoming to see LGBTQ+ characters, especially with the similarities of their liberation with non-white people.
Good choice; this book seems to have had had a very positive impact on slavery and the dehumanisation of black people.
Despite being the root cause of a few stereotypes of black people, it is notable that the black people in the novel actually have character development throughout that breaks at least some of those stereotypes.
(Posted from an alt. account because of federation issues.)
We actually had some great discussions about this, about the changing nature of acceptability, it's made me much happier to adjust my vocabulary over the years and to consider the way I speak.
I said it didn't really impact me but actually, looks like it actually did a bit!
All the more reason to provide these kinds of books to people - especially young people - to educate them in many ways that the school curriculum fails to.