Wife Of His Youth
People often make the categories of race, class, gender, sexuality,
age,
physical condition, etc., contend for the title of most oppressed.
Within"race," various populations groups then compete for that top spot.
Through
the book, The Wife of His Youth, by Charles Wadell Chesnutt one can
learn that
racism existed within the "race," colored mattered, and that
racism evolves
throughout the racial history. Racism existed within the race.
People within the
groups competed to be at the top. In The Wife of His Youth,
the main character
Mr. Ryder is a highly respected man in his society
called the Blue Veins. The
Blue Veins is a society for the colored people
who have white skin that their
veins show. Mr. Ryder is faced with a
situation where he has to choose to stay
at the top by hiding the truth and
marrying a highly respected woman in the Blue
Veins, Mrs. Molly Dixon or
reveal his secret and be married to a woman who is
considered low among the
races. However Mr. Ryder chooses to reveal that a
former slave is his wife,
but in order for him to come to the conclusion he
struggles much about how
the others would feel about this situation because
mostly likely people of
his society would look down upon him. Color matters
within the race. In The
Wife of His Youth, the Blue Veins is a society that does
not emphasize
culture of the race, but how light the color of their skins are.
The
people of the society must have really light skin to be even considered to
be
a member of the Blue Veins. The wife of his youth, a former slave, Liza
Jane
would never be considered to be a member of the Blue Veins because she
was very
black and her social status in society was of a former plantation
worker. One
could also see that Mr. Ryder struggles whether or not to reveal
his secret to
the Blue Veins because colored mattered and he did not know if
they would be
able to accept the fact that he was married to his ugly black
woman. In
addition, Mr. Ryder had to somehow gain recognition from the Blue
Veins that it
was okay to have a wife outside the approval of the race, the
society. He asks,
"Shall you acknowledge her?" (p. 56) He wait for their
nod of some kind of
positive reaction. Racism evolves; it has no single,
permanently fixed set of
characteristics. Racism is not a set theory in the
minds of the people, but
instead a theory that constantly changes according
to the time and the needs of
the environment. Mr. Ryder in the Blue Veins who
was in a high position who
accepted only the light-colored is able to
reconsider his status for the wife of
his youth. He was able to persuade the
Blue Veins so that the wife of his youth
can be accepted in the society. Also
by reading The Wife of His Youth, one knows
that Mr. Ryder was a former
slave, too who just happens to be free and of high
status at the present
moment. After he becomes "a someone" in society he
wishes to forget about his
past until the wife of his youth comes along his path
and makes his decide,
truth or fame. Through the book, The Wife of His Youth,
one can learn that
racism existed within the "race," colored mattered, and
that racism evolves.
The challenge is to understand the changes of racial
history and draw
strength from our understandings. Also today one has to
acknowledge the fact
that other races exist, not only blacks. In doing so, one
has to proceed with
both boldness and infinite care. Talking race is an
intellectual minefield;
for every social observation, one can find three
contradictions and four
necessary qualifications. Crawling through the
complexity, it helps to think:
"keep your eye on the prize, which is uniting
against the monster."