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Injustice In The Many And The Few By James Chaney

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Injustice is like being the bad candy in a Halloween bag. You are always pushed to the bottom without any thought. Some people during the Civil Rights Movement were not thought about. About how they felt. What they wanted. They were just pushed aside. This made them feel as if they were supposed to do something. They felt hopeful. In the poems "Freedom Summer" and "The Many and the Few", the author uses differing points of view to contribute to the tone.

In the poem "Freedom Summer", the author applies the judgement of using James Chaney to put perspective into the situation. He uses Chaney because he was the only African-American in the group and he also had the "short end of the stick." Chaney reacted with fright. This makes the tone sound piteous. Particularly, Chaney states in Line 21, "After single shots to the heart had taken Mickey and Andrew, they'd saved three bullets for me." The evidence shown means that while the others experienced one bullet each, Chaney got three bullets. In reality, this does not sound fair. Although it doesn't sound fair, it makes his story a little bit more …show more content…
The author might have done this because told from the bus driver, it would be against Rosa Parks and the tone would be biased against her. After all, he is the one that called the police because she declined the offer for another seat. In Line 15-17 they said, "Told the Few of them to take/ The deeper seats. But she declined. /Blake stopped the bus and called the police;" Another reason the writer chose to address the poem as an outsider is because if it was Parks herself, she would not know how to speak primly about the situation and the tone would not be modest. This is so because she was one of the "Few" called attention to on the bus. Let alone, it would be unusual to talk about yourself. This is why the author uses an outsider to make the tone out to be selfless and

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