Reginald McKnight Fiction Reading
Published on February 22, 2005
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jtatter
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I was surprised and delighted that the story, “The More I Like Flies,” read by the visiting writer Reginald McKnight, fit in so many different ways with the stories we have read and Fuller’s Soldier’s Play, which we are reading now. One thing that I find significant is the narrator’s sympathy with the new recruits at the Air Force Academy because of the way the upper-class cadets treat them. The hierarchy of the military has much in common with the fundamentals of racism, and this idea is a theme in Fuller’s play as well: respect and power have nothing to do with personal qualities but, rather, with external things like the uniform someone wears or the color of someone’s skin. The great irony of the story is the “moral” of the long story that Kelly tells the narrator about getting shot by Barney, the American Indian, while in the Marine Corps. Kelly over and over complains to the narrator, “what’s so great about being white?” The reason Kelly thinks that racial profiling is no big deal is that he feels that he was profiled as white by all of the people of color in his unit in the Marines, and that Barney shot him because he is white. What the story shows, however, is that Barney shot him because Kelly is racist: almost everything Kelly says about other people in his storytelling has a racist slant. True examples of racial profiling come up in the narrator’s comments about how, simply because he is a black man, he is treated by whites.
What did you find most significant about the story and why? I am not asking you what you liked best (though I’m curious about that, too) but what about the story made the most significant connection to our class readings and discussions. You should respond to this “article” within 48 hours of its posting.