In many cases, the path to prejudice begins by simply branding something as "different." An example of this used in the book is when Moody and her siblings arrived at the movie theater at the same time as their white friends, Katie and Bill. Not thinking anything of it, Essie, Adline, and Junior follow the white children into the "white lobby," only to find out that they were different. "I had never really thought of them as white before. Now all of a sudden they were white, and their whiteness made them better than me" (p. 34). Still unsure as to what makes white people different, Essie even makes up a game to examine the white children's' privates. Later on in the story, the murder of Emmitt Till brings up the issue of fear and how it can only widen divides. "Before Emmet Till's murder, I had known the fear of hunger, hell, and the Devil. But now there was a new fear known to me, the fear of being killed just because I was black" (p.
In many cases, the path to prejudice begins by simply branding something as "different." An example of this used in the book is when Moody and her siblings arrived at the movie theater at the same time as their white friends, Katie and Bill. Not thinking anything of it, Essie, Adline, and Junior follow the white children into the "white lobby," only to find out that they were different. "I had never really thought of them as white before. Now all of a sudden they were white, and their whiteness made them better than me" (p. 34). Still unsure as to what makes white people different, Essie even makes up a game to examine the white children's' privates. Later on in the story, the murder of Emmitt Till brings up the issue of fear and how it can only widen divides. "Before Emmet Till's murder, I had known the fear of hunger, hell, and the Devil. But now there was a new fear known to me, the fear of being killed just because I was black" (p.