Summary: Aibileen is becoming more confident and vocal about her opinions on race, especially after a member of the NAACP is killed by someone who is presumed to be KKK. Hilly also confronts Skeeter about a booklet about the Jim Crow laws that she had seen Skeeter reading because she says it would be bad for her husband’s image as he is running for the state senate. Hilly’s maid, Yule May, also agrees to be interviewed by Skeeter. Personal Connection: Most of this chapter is about things changing, whether it is relations between blacks and whites or a new tension between Hilly and Skeeter. I feel like this time in my life involves a lot of changes. Just this year I changed from an accelerated history class to a more challenging AP history class,
Summary: Aibileen traches Mae Mobley to use the bathroom by herself and the Leefolts build Aibileen a separate colored bathroom outside. Skeeter gets approval from Mrs. Stein to start writing a rough draft about what life is like as a colored maid. She approaches Aibileen to interview her and though at first she is reluctant but eventually decides to do it as long as they’re careful. Meanwhile Skeeter goes on a long awaited date with the senator’s son, Stuart, who is drunk and incredibly rude the entire time.
The character of Aibileen is often depicted as a symbol of courage and perseverance; throughout the story, she is often shown endangering her life in many different ways trying to contribute to Skeeter’s book. While she was overcoming the grief of her sole son’s unlawful death, Aibileen soon begins to realize that she wanted to make a change in the way Caucasians saw African Americans and ultimately achieve her son’s goal. Although the persona of Aibileen initially feared to help write Skeeter’s book, she later ends up agreeing. During the time she felt intimidated, she mentions the severity of punishments for crimes where African Americans express their political/social opinions and/or do something considered ethically wrong by
Suzanne Lebsock did a good job writing this book. She used factual historical interpretation to tell you about the way life was in the late nineteenth century when it came to the way black and whites worked together, while still remaining to tell you a good story. Suzanne keeps the reader thinking about the story and not only thinking about the history behind. One way she does this is by making you know the characters in the story. For most of the characters she introduces she puts a little picture on the page and gives a description about them.
The start, Abileene went through the stage of realization. She dealt with her difficult times by praying and creating friendships. She became closer to Skeeter, a young white aspiring journalist, by sharing her stories and experiences with her. By doing this, Abileene grew as a person by becoming more comfortable speaking up for herself. By speaking with Skeeter and being a part of the writing of her book, she becomes more bold.
In comparison, Skeeter's work revolutionizes the world of a major group. When trying to convince Aibelen to help her write the book she explains that showing the perspective of the help, a previously undocumented point of view, can help people understand what they experience (Taylor). As shown later in the film, the book showcases the lives of different African American maids and increases their visibility. By doing so people begin to question if the way the maids have been treated is ethical or not. The book was a major part of helping the civil rights movement.
She faces many mental dilemmas while this incident weighs down on her. She begins to constantly ask herself what the difference between white and black people are. This boosts her want to join the NAACP, which leads into the college phase of her
The book takes place in the 1930’s, Maycomb County, Alabama where some segregation still exists. This novel shows how segregation and racism still existed and how it affected everyone in the County. Also, throughout this book, the children experience different events that cause them to have to grow up and see things from different perspectives.
By an anonymous writer later revealed as Skeeter also known as Eugenia Phelan. Skeeter, a white woman, returns to her hometown (Mississippi) to discover that her motherly nanny Constantine has left but no one tells what happened. Soon Skeeter realizes the injustice her society practices and decides to write a book where voices of black will be raised. She approaches Aibileen for sharing her narrative to which Aibileen responds positively and also let’s Minny in their secret. Minny, Aibileen’s friend, another black help, reveals a secret about Miss Hilly that ensures Miss Hilly’s silence after the publication of their writing project.
The book has five sections/chapters and by the end of the second part “The Desert”, one knows something has to change. When the section “Welch” is introduced, and Erma and Stanley’s characters join the family, racism is added to the horror of atrocities. As the reader, one can’t help but hope for
(The Help, 2011) Inspired by this, Aibileen amends her fear and becomes the first of the maids to disclose her story to Skeeter. She realizes the danger that could result from her decision, but she embraces the risk and relies on her faith for guidance. Aibileen wrestled with just how much courage she would need to do what Skeeter had asked her to do, despite the "bitter seed" planted inside of her. The convergence of Skeeter and Aibileen is a result of the courage demonstrated by Aibileen. Subsequently, Aibileen muses to herself, “God says we need to love our enemies, it hard to do, but it can start by telling the truth."
The profound novel, The Help, can be interpreted as having many themes and subliminal messages about life, but to truly understand the meaning of them, the conflicting points must be recognized. Due to the fact that the setting of the novel is during segregation, the friction between blacks and whites is what creates the novel. Although it is easily recognizable that one of the main conflicts is segregation, there is a major conflict between two prominent characters, Hilly and Skeeter, wealthy white women. Some of the issues within this novel lye in location and the social aspects of living in a small southern town in that time. There are several underlying conflicts in The Help, but the main one that sets up all the themes are the conflicts
As a result of Aibileen’s changes, Aibileen’s voice is brittle, tremulous and quavering while expressing her perspective because she is angry at the inequality. Now she cannot accept this unfair and irrational discrimination from the world. She changes amazingly. She showed her courage and opinions to white racists. The other blacks starts to pluck up courage to confront the whites’ wrong view about racism, for example Minny who is a black maid participates to help Skeeter publishing the book and then all of maids start to decide telling their stories for a book.
I’m only taking 5 classes this year, which makes my life a little less stressing. My toughest subject this year was probably Economics. It was something different, a new experience. I was introduced to a whole new level of vocabulary and it was tough to memorize. I also did horrible in the tests, but I was able to push through that
Throughout the novel Aibileen's character triumphs in the face of adversity by neglecting what is around, but the growth is slow and painful process. Aibileen's anger and silence towards the whites, the conditions of the black maids and the events around her make she realizes that she has more to do in life than being a maid and finds the courage to try something new. The book she writes with Skeeter and the other maids empowers her to stand up for injustice. Her identity is determined by her place in society as a maid, but she embraces a role in writing project about the suffering of the black maids, so she finds a new identity as a writer and a fighter. She embraces the risk and relies on her faith for guidance.
A young college graduate, Skeeter, returns home to be with her ailing mother, and in her ambition to succeed as a writer, turns to the black maids she knows. Skeeter is determined to collect their oral histories and write about a culture that values social facade and ignores the human dignity of many members of the community. Two maids, Aibileen and Minny, agree to share their stories, stories of struggle and daily humiliation, of hard work and low pay, of fear for themselves. It is a time of change, when