Research Paper Instructions The research paper will be similar to the short essay in that I will be asking you to discuss one of the works we read/viewed for the class and compare it to a modern-day i

LYNCHING OF JUBE 0

The Lynching of Jube Benson

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Course Title

July 5th, 2020

In the southern regions of the United States in the 1900s, this is about the same time as the emancipation of the Slaves, the short story 'The lynch of Jube Benson' by African-American novelist Pavol Laurence Dunbar takes place. In fact, the story takes place in the library of Gordon Fairfax, with three men present: the well-educated reporter, Handon Gay, library owner, Gordon Fairfax, and the doctor, Melville. Such three people are appointed to positions that are important in society. This is about the white storyteller, Doctor Melville, who tells the other two that he has taken part in his black pal, Jube Benson's lynching. Unfortunately, false charges against him were made, but after lynching him, it was proved first innocent.

Dr. Melville, a relatively young doctor in medicine, and Handon Gay, a young journalist, discuss various day-long issues in the library of a southern gentleman named Gordon Fairfax, among them lynching. Fairfax didn't want to visit one but wouldn’t avoid one if the opportunity arose, Dr. Melville insists he would avoid one because, in his relation to his friends, he saw and participated in Jube Benson's lynching some seven years earlier.

Dr. Melville has recently come to Brandon to open the medical practice for the white and dark people during the lynching time. Soon after his arrival, the young and attractive Annie Daly, daughter of a rich townsman from whom it leased office, began to set his interest. Dr. Melville was also visiting the Black man Jube Benson, who was hardworking and dedicate to young Annie. During this encounter, he encountered the Dalys.

Doctor Melville, who has a very fascinating and alternative view of Jube Benson, especially during the climax, is the main character in the plot. In a patronizing voice like 'Jube was a great Cerberus' (page 3, line 13) as well as a 'evil yet benevolent ghost' Dr. Melville, who was also a protagonist in the sly novel, mentions Jube Benson. The quotation suggests that, in one way or another, Dr Melville names the evil minion Jube Benson, but at the same time the psychiatrist also loves him. "I always loved him!" (page 4, line 15). Although Doctor Melville dehumanizes Jube in a way, without being able to comprehend why, he has a much more cynical view of Jube, as Jube is guilty of murdering Annie. From the portrayal of Jube as a decent man, with pure intentions, Doctor Melville turns to a man who stands for all darkness, "This black man stood for all bad forces." (page 6, lines 10-11). Though Jube is a good friend, Dr. Melville doesn't think of him that way, because Jube is black. Dr Melville 's way of thought varies at the moment. The way we think is. During the 1900s men were more like objects in the thinking of a black man. Doctor Melville had to act in the same way as he was in Jube due to his social skills and values. In the case of Doctor Melville and others he describes the situation as "still and orderly" (page 6, line 16), as the "best citizens" (page 6, line 18) who maintain justice and peace in the small town.

In his quest for Annie Daly's attentions, Jube Benson was Dr Melville 's friend so much that he dismayed all other fans. Jube Benson also served as a doctor's nurse during a typhoid fever outbreak, contracted by Dr Melville after treatment for most city dwellers.

An "incredible crime history" and "abuse anatomy" illustrates a case in which a woman accused initially of crime by an unnamed man, but later believed it to be part by a false narrative. Included are the accounts of a couple of young women who initially protested about rape by a man. This may be on the pretext of charging money for sexual favors by capturing sexually-impaired tapes. During common procedure, most police departments and investigation teams employ information to decode the elusive secret causes and know the precise situation on hand. Included in the study is the psychological analysis of girls in hospitals after committing the crime by evaluating and examining criminal cases and by tracking the monetary rewards for violence.

Within the investigative records, the female victims are investigated within practice. This further supports the female verdict as the story varies because of strong financial rewards after sexual offences in society. The adjustment to version may also be under the basis that the perpetrator threatens the girl to post her lewd images under facebook and give them to her relatives and colleagues, leading to social humiliation in society, if she discloses it to the police. This led to the evidence being misrepresented by criminal characters and by the witness. For certain cases the perpetrator attempts to kill the woman in whom the criminal was involved, and the victim stops the social shame of society from spreading. The females change their work to continue to run their household and even alter the story of the police so they do not have to reveal the whereabouts of the female victims to the society 's people.

The next summer's evening Dr. Melville went home to find Annie Daly beaten, raped and close to death from a visit to the nearby village. Dr. Melville struggled to defend her, but she was dead but not until she named the intruder as "The black—"Because there had been no identification of Jube Benson, the victim of this heinous crime was instantly believed. Jube Benson was founded and punished by a lynch mob. immediately.

Jube was soon found, faced with the dead of Annie, and immediately hung, despite his apologies and earnest pleas, to visit his own little girlfriend, Lucy. The first one to take the cord was Dr. Melville.

The author, Paul Laurence Dunbar, concludes the story by revealing it was a white criminal who imitated a Negro in his face (pages 6-7, lines 45-2). The white Americans are made conscious by Paul Laurence Dunbar of racially discriminatory issues with the Negros. Dunbar points out that only by avoiding the False Education (page 6, line 4), which creates the issue of bias, can these issues be overcome. The end of the 'false education' will bring about peace and fraternity. The story 'Jube Benson's lynching' deals with some of the black stereotypes which the whites have. Initially, Doctor Melville and the other men automatically postulated the killing of Jube Benson and could not defend himself, since even before they saw him he was culpable in their eyes. Furthermore, the prejudice is evident when Dr Melville and his fellow men find that Annie was not killed by Jube Benson. They respond absolutely against Jube because the latest murderer was a white man and so they did not have to hurry up as before in the very quiet response. Finally, when White couldn't just blame a Black Man for anything they did, they were blamed as long as they were guilty. Tom Skinner had dirt on his hair, pretending to mimic a Negro, and so was he. Tom Skinner knew it, so he painted his face with black in order to avoid punishment. If it weren't Jubes' brother and his friend, he would have been a free man.



References

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