57 pages • 1 hour read
Sugar is set during a specific period in history that saw a great deal of change in America, especially in states like Louisiana where slavery was built into the people’s livelihood. Plantations that required masses of people to work the land had the same problems River Road has in Sugar: “Since Emancipation, there’re not enough workers. Almost everyone young enough, without gnarled, crinkly brown hands, has gone north” (7). The mass exodus of younger, healthier Black workers opened up many labor-intensive farming jobs in the south, particularly the states of Louisiana and Mississippi. These jobs were eventually filled by Chinese immigrants fleeing their own hardships. These immigrants faced horrific discrimination from white Americans, and laws were passed specifically to prevent them from becoming citizens.
The abolishment of slavery meant plantation workers were no longer considered property, making their cooperation essential to those used to demanding work. Thus, the dichotomy between characters Mister Wills, the owner of River Road, and Tom, the overseer. Mister Wills asserts, “Slavery isn’t returning, Tom. Like it or not, times are changing. Can’t make a living without willing workers” (100). He understands that Reconstruction is a time of change, and through his (and his son’s) friendships with Sugar and Plus, gain access to 8,550+ more expert-written Study Guides. Including features:
By Jewell Parker Rhodes
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