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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 5 page paper considers the character of Easy Rawlins presented in Walter Mosley's novel Devil in a Blue Dress and relates the issue of race, especially Easy's blackness, as it impacts his role as a private eye. This paper considers the sometimes conflicting view of Easy Rawlins and the impact for the novel as a whole. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_Erawlin.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
duties of detective, and Mosley uses Rawlins as a vehicle through which the reader gains an insight into the specific elements of the Black community and the nature of "blackness"
in defining the central actions surrounding this character. As a result, Mosleys novel not only takes the shape of a mystery, but also presents a distinct vision of ethnicity,
social struggle, and the Black community and also raises issues including distinctions based on race and gender. One of the most notable elements of Mosleys novel is that
is challenges the standard perceptions of the mystery novel as a format that generally supports the characterizations of whites. More often than not, mysteries involve white detectives, private eyes
or law enforcement professionals, many of whom enter the Black community for short spans of time, but few of whom have any kind of internal connection to this community.
Mosley viewed this as a considerable limitation in recognizing the correlation between professionals and those they serve and in substantiating the view of the Black community as a central, viable
and non-hostile environment. Primarily, Mosley hoped to demonstrate, through his introduction of Easy Rawlins, that disparities between the law and the Black community are not always prevalent, and that
complicity exists in a form based both in professionalism and in the role of individuals as an extension of this community. It is interesting to note that when
Mosley was asked to discuss the impetus for the development of Devil in a Blue Dress, and the source of his inspiration for the story, Mosley commented that much of
his development in this story stemmed from his own experiences. "I wrote about a guy, owned a bar, was married to a woman. He was messing around all the
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