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1. Author
Tobias Wolff (1945—) was born in Alabama in 1945. His parents divorced when he was a boy. Wolff’s mother retained custody of him. As a child, Wolff traveled with his mother, Rosemary, to the Pacific Northwest, where she remarried. Growing up in the Pacific Northwest, young Tobias soon was forced to endure life under his strict and cruel stepfather. His efforts to get away from his stepfather led to his self-transformation.
That period of Wolff’s life is recounted in This Boy’s Life: A Memoir, which was later made into a film.
He lives with his family in upstate New York and teaches writing at Syracuse University.
From 1964 through 1968, Wolff served as a lieutenant with the U.S. Army Special Forces (Green Berets) in Vietnam. He later recounted his wartime experiences in the memoir In the Pharaoh’s Army: Memoirs of the Lost War.
In 1972 Wolff earned his B.A. and then his M.A. from Oxford University with First Class Honors in English three years later.
He is the author of the short novel The Barracks Thief, which won the 1985 PEN/Faulkner Award; two collections of short stories, Back in the World (collecting “Say Yes”) and In the Garden of the North American Martyrs, which received the Saint Lawrence Award for fiction in 1982.
2. Racism
Racism: the belief that race accounts for differences in human character or ability and that a particular race is superior to others.
3. Ku Klux Klan
Koo Klucks Klan also known as KKK: a secret white supremacist organization at various times in American history terrorized blacks and white sympathizers with violent acts of lynching, shootings and whippings.
Founded: 1866
Founder: Confederate Civil War veterans
Headquarters: Powderly, Kentucky; Butler, Indiana; Jasper, Texas
Background: The Klan has fragmented into scores of competing factions. Most of these are nominally independent.
Estimated size: no more than a few thousand, organized into slightly more than 100 units
Media: mass mailings, leafletting and the Internet
Strategy: public rallies and protests
Ideology: some Christian fundamentalist beliefs, Christian Identity, white supremacy
Financial support: little
Birth: Six college students founded the Ku Klux Klan between December 1865 Tennessee. The six young men organized as a social club or fraternity and spent their time in horseplay of various types, including wearing disguises and galloping about town after dark. They were surprised to learn that their nightly appearances were causing fear, particularly among farmer slaves in the area. They quickly took advantage of this effect and the group began a rapid expansion. Various factions formed in different towns, which led to a meeting in April 1867 to codify rules and organizational structure.
Targeting those set free after the American Civil War—the African Americans, KKK designed to spread fear throughout the Black population that still lived in the southern states. The most hatred was directed against the poor black families in the south who were very vulnerable to attack.
Reconstruction: In 1867, General Nathan Bedford Forrest, converted the Klan into a paramilitary force that served to directly oppose the formation of Republican governments. Klansmen dressed in white robes and covered hoods, rode on horses, and dragged black people and some white republicans from their homes, assaulting them by whipping or lynching them. Such assaults were successful in keeping black men from the polls, and thus altering election results.
With the enactment of Congressional legislation and enforcement of the law by the federal government, the Klan was extinguished in 1871—1872.
By the 1960s, as the Civil Rights Movement was emerging, the Klan’s membership reached almost twenty thousand. Like the former Klan organization, there was not a central leadership.
While the Klan still exists today, its membership is in the low thousands. The Klan has ties to other white supremacist organizations such as the Aryan Nations and the Skinheads.
4. Jim Crow Laws
Racial segregation, called “Jim Crow”, excluded blacks from public transport and facilities, jobs, juries, and neighborhoods. Blacks had separate hospitals, prisons, orphanages, parks and pools. The 19th century ended with the races firmly segregated—culturally and legally.