To Griffin's disgust and surprise, many Southern white men believe that Black people are not capable of moral refinement, fidelity, or propriety, and that as a result they are mindlessly sexual creatures. This leads many white men, who might be extremely moral in white society, to question black men shamelessly about their sexual experiences, and even to press them for information about where they can find a black girl to sleep with. Their implication is that Black people are so amoral that they will not even understand that these questions are unusual or rude. The irony of this attitude is that it simply reveals the perverse sexual obsessions of the white men who exhibit it, and has nothing to do with the actual sexual experiences or feelings of Black people. Nevertheless, as Griffin realizes, it is an extremely dangerous attitude when coupled with Black poverty, because it creates a market in which Black girls become prostitutes for money, and Black men become white men's pimps.
If you agree, your answer could focus on the fact that Griffin always has the option to become a white man again whenever racism gets to be too much for him, an option no Black person has. Griffin deals with his experiences with the knowledge that they would be temporary, while Black people are forced to endure a lifetime of unremitting prejudice. He is not limited in his financial means and he only experiences life as a Black man for six weeks.
If you disagree, you could argue that Griffin comes as close to the Black experience as it is possible for a white man to come—close enough for other Black people to consider him one of them—even after he stops his medication and goes back to being a white man. As a result of this, and of the enormous personal sacrifices Griffin made to write
By choosing to tell his story in the form of a diary, Griffin creates an extremely personal framework for his experiences. Moreover, by writing that diary in a fairly novelistic form, Griffin gives himself a great deal of leverage, which he can use to involve the reader in his story. One technique he uses is physical description. He often describes meals, buildings, and human scenes in extremely evocative terms, creating the sense that the reader is there with him. Another technique he uses is to employ other characters to heighten the sense of drama without explicitly commenting on what is happening. For instance, Griffin emphasizes that his wife thinks his idea is dangerous but brave, conveying to the reader the idea that he is undertaking a heroic task. Twice Griffin uses George Levitan to describe the great danger Griffin is placing himself in to pose as a Black man. This creates an ominous sense of suspense, as the reader waits for Levitan's unpleasant predictions to come true.