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Summary Of Pauli Murray's 'Proud Shoes'

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William Lewis Nora Augustine WMST 101-609 1 December 2016 Reading Reflection #3: Proud Shoes Reflection prompt: Proud Shoes is the chronicle of Pauli Murray’s maternal grandparents, Robert and Cornelia Fitzgerald, and their experiences living in the segregation and Jim Crow-era South, particularly North Carolina. How does the book’s emphasis on interpersonal relationships and individual struggle influence how we understand the broader social and political context? What do we learn about gender identity and gender difference through the lives of Robert and Cornelia? Proud Shoes is a story told by Pauli Murray about her experiences being raised by maternal grandparents - Robert and Cornelia Fitzgerald - in Durham, North Carolina. Jim Crow laws and prejudice are presented in the Old South as an integral part of the biographical telling of the author’s family history. Murray recounts memories of her childhood as well as that of her close relatives to tell a narrative of mixed racial heritage, miscegenation, and the old bonds of slavery. The book’s emphasis on interpersonal relationships and individual struggle influence provide biographical evidence for how we understand the broader social and political context of the times. …show more content…

"If a white man defaulted, it was an individual defection; if a colored man failed, the whole race was at fault." (p. 138) Robert was shot in the head during the war and the injury contributed to his blindness later in life. Even so, he was denied his request for a pension because of race. Robert was very focused on educating his children into becoming outstanding members of both the black and white communities to promote a positive reflection on the black community. Robert’s struggle to secure an identity for himself and his children underlines the social discrepancies that define this

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