Context of Indelible

Pulitzer Prize–winning cartoonist Bell, known for his syndicated strip Candorville, delivers an unflinching debut graphic memoir that balances gravity, vulnerability, and humor in relaying his life as a Black man and parent. When he was a child in 1981, a terrifying standoff with a pair of Dobermans left an indelible imprint that became a metaphor for future racist interactions. Later, after Bell’s white mother prohibited him from playing outside with a water gun, she attempted “the talk,” a conversation between Black parents and their children about living while Black. She cautioned, “White people won’t see you or treat you the way they do little white boys.” Indeed, racism penetrated Bell’s life into adulthood: he was bullied, surveilled, and falsely accused of delinquency and plagiarism. Reckoning with his identity during an ongoing history of racialized violence, Bell recounts how his father’s inability to give “the talk” still haunts him and takes on greater significance when Bell’s own son asks about George Floyd.

–Publishers Weekly

Which of the following BEST interprets the meaning of “indelible” in the passage?

Related Topic
The Talk

–The Talk by Darrin Bell | Image by The Alphabet

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