How It Feels To Be Colored Me Summary

Improved Essays
In the article, "How It Feels to be Colored Me" by Zora Neale Hurston, she describes her life as an African American women in the early 20th century and what it was like. She uses paper bags to describe people, and in the paper bags are random things that make up life like hope, dreams, disappointments, etc…
Zora grew up in an all-black community in Florida, so her color was never an issue until she left home for boarding school when she was 13. Back home she says "everyone's Zora", but at her new boarding school in Jacksonville, her color was no longer invisible to her, because Jacksonville is mostly a diverse community.
I am from a very small town, and we have very little colored families in our community. So, the colored families we do

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