himself and begins to become an invisible man, just as African Americans had been rendered nearly invisible in a society that sees all white. In Between the World and Me, Ta-Nehisi Coates presents a letter to his son specifically revolving around the embodied state of blackness, placing an emphasis on the stolen bodies of African Americans during slavery. Coates also considers the logic of white supremacy and goes as far as presenting society as a dogma laid down by the ruling order, which, he argues…
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