Even though Harlem was an African-American community, the life of the black woman was by no means improved by this fact. The place itself was degenerate and full of crime and as such, it did not offer any protection. All this was due to the racial discrimination of the white people against the black. Although the black had some economical and political rights, the society was very far from equality. The white people simply considered them less than human, and persecuted them only in a subtler way than during the years of slavery. A black person could not rise to a better social or economical statute simply because the prejudices against him or her were permanent obstacles. As Petry shows, the condition of the black woman was even more dramatic as she was constantly objectified as a sexual instrument by the male opinion. Lutie's case as presented in the novel is more adduces evidence for this situation. Despite her intelligence and her singing talents, she is unable to make it in a righteous way. When she refuses the sexual price that she is supposed to pay for her career, she is simply dismissed as a singer. Furthermore, when she tries to get a loan so as to take away her little...
In her rage, she kills Boots, emphasizing thus the impossibility of staying pure in an environment contaminated by crime.Ann Petry's "The Street": A novel in the American naturalistic tradition Ann Petry's "The Street" is a story about Lutie Johnson, an intelligent, strong, and beautiful black woman who does her best to raise an eight-year-old son as a single parent, advance in her job, and work her way out of the Harlem streets. Petry uses Lutie Johnson as a medium to explore the limitations of the American capitalist system; the
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