The Store
THE STORE
by T.S. Stribling
Award: Pulitzer Winner 1933
Date Read: May 2, 2016
The Store is yet another unlikely novel I would never have picked up had it not been a part of my challenge. Colonel Vaiden has returned from the Civil War to a society that is still grappling with the changes emancipation has brought to his small town. Colonel Vaiden is very firm in his views on race as a former plantation overseer and active member of the KKK. Throughout the novel, Vaiden is actively trying to transition himself from a blue-collar member of society to white-collar.
The Store is a strange time capsule of racism from the Civil War well up to the time this novel was written in 1932 and, obviously, well beyond that to the present. I found it mystifying to see so many of the stereotypes and ignorance prevalent in the racism of the past still alive today. I am baffled as to when we as a society will confront the wounds of the past and get a clue in the present. This book provides a still necessary and relevant view on the historical context of current race relations all through the guise of the unlikeable Colonel Vaiden.
by T.S. Stribling
Award: Pulitzer Winner 1933
Date Read: May 2, 2016
The Store is yet another unlikely novel I would never have picked up had it not been a part of my challenge. Colonel Vaiden has returned from the Civil War to a society that is still grappling with the changes emancipation has brought to his small town. Colonel Vaiden is very firm in his views on race as a former plantation overseer and active member of the KKK. Throughout the novel, Vaiden is actively trying to transition himself from a blue-collar member of society to white-collar.
The Store is a strange time capsule of racism from the Civil War well up to the time this novel was written in 1932 and, obviously, well beyond that to the present. I found it mystifying to see so many of the stereotypes and ignorance prevalent in the racism of the past still alive today. I am baffled as to when we as a society will confront the wounds of the past and get a clue in the present. This book provides a still necessary and relevant view on the historical context of current race relations all through the guise of the unlikeable Colonel Vaiden.
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