Being an “Other” in “The Sky is Gray” and “Equal Opportunity”
Being an outsider is something that can make a person feel proud and independent, determined and convicted, or scared and alone. Sometimes, it can make a person feel all of these things, and sometimes it all depends on how those around one view him or her. This paper will show how four character in Ernest J. Gaines’ “The Sky is Gray” and Walter Mosley’s “Equal Opportunity” feel their otherness in these two stories.
In Gaines’ “The Sky is Gray” and Mosley’s “Equal Opportunity,” characters are viewed as different and outside the accepted norms of the majority by those who meet them. In “The Sky is Gray,” the boy in the doctor’s office who doesn’t believe in God is viewed as an aberration by the preacher and the ladies in the waiting room. He is beaten twice by the preacher and discussed by the ladies in the office as something strange: “Lord, what children go’n be saying next?” one of the women complains (Gaines 1112). The narrator of the story and his Mama are also like outsiders: they are told to wait at the doctor’s...
Works Cited
Gaines, Ernest J. “The Sky is Gray.”
Mosley, Walter. “Equal Opportunity.”
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